ASIA: Failed criminal justice institutions in Asia and its impact on human rights in the region

The Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC) wishes to inform you about the side event that it is jointly organising with the Right Livelihood Award Foundation – Sweden/Switzerland, The Bread for the World: Protestant Development Service, OMCT: World Organisation against Torture, and CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation on 7 March 2016 at Palais des Nations coinciding with the 31st Regular Session of the UN Human Rights Council – Geneva, Switzerland.

ASIA: Council should lead reforms of judicial institutions to realise rights

The Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC) and Franciscans International wish to bring to the immediate attention of this council that the judges, prosecutors, and lawyers in Asia face acute forms of suppression of their freedom to engage in their profession independently. Perhaps Hong Kong, South Korea, India, and Japan are exception to this general category.

SOUTH ASIA: Domestic justice system requires reform to address extrajudicial executions

The fight against extremism and crime are the excuses the governments in India and Pakistan often cite for resorting to extrajudicial executions. Harsh legislations, like the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, which is implemented in several regions of India, provide statutory impunity for extrajudicial executions, better known as “encounter killings” in South Asia.