Parliament calls on India to release
the 14 Estonian and 6 Briton seamen detained in the south of the country, strongly
condemns the nuclear test conducted on 6 January by the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea and deplores the recent use of excessive force by security
forces in Ethiopia, in three resolutions voted on Thursday.
Estonian and UK seamen detained in India
MEPs call on the Indian authorities to release the 35-strong
crew – including 14 Estonians and 6 Britons – of the Merchant Vessel Seaman
Guard Ohio, who were arrested in India’s southern state of Tamil Nadu in
October 2013 and charged with illegally possessing weapons. The defendants
claim to have been on an anti-piracy mission and have consistently denied any
wrongdoing. The charges were rapidly quashed, but the Indian authorities
appealed, forbidding the seamen to leave the country.
Earlier this month, each of the 35 sailors and guards was
sentenced to a maximum term of five years’ “rigorous imprisonment”. They are
considering whether to appeal against the sentences within the prescribed 90
days. Whilst recognising the integrity of the Indian legal system, Parliament
urges the authorities to release all those concerned pending the conclusion of
the judicial process.
Situation in Ethiopia
Parliament strongly condemns the recent use of violence by the
security forces and the increased number of cases of human rights violations in
Ethiopia. It calls for a credible, transparent and independent investigation
into the killings of at least 140 protesters and into other alleged human
rights violations in connection with the protest movement after the May 2015 federal
elections in the country.
It also calls on the Ethiopian authorities to stop suppressing
the free flow of information, to guarantee the rights of local civil society
and media and to facilitate access throughout Ethiopia for independent
journalists and human rights monitors. The EU, as the single largest donor,
should ensure that EU development assistance is not contributing to human
rights violations in Ethiopia,
Recent nuclear test by North Korea
MEPs call for meaningful and effective sanctions to be decided
upon by the international community following the nuclear test of 6 January
2016 by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK). They call the test an
unnecessary and dangerous provocation, a violation of the relevant UN Security
Council resolutions and a serious threat to peace and stability.
Desiring a diplomatic and political solution to the DPRK nuclear
issue, MEPs ask the state authorities to abandon nuclear and ballistic missile
programmes in a complete, verifiable and irreversible manner and to cease all
related activities.
Parliament condemns the “systematic, widespread and grave
violations of human rights”, the severity of food shortages and tough
restrictions on the freedoms of thought, conscience, religion or belief,
opinion and expression, peaceful assembly and association in the country. It
asks the DPRK government immediately to end its use of the systematic
suppression of human rights as a political tool to control and monitor its own
population. It is time now for the international community to take concrete
action to end the perpetrators’ impunity and bring them before the
International Criminal Court, it adds.
Source: eureporter
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