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- <text id=90TT1072>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Persecution:Repression's Hall Of Shame
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 49
- PERSECUTION
- Repression's Hall of Shame
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Nelson Mandela notwithstanding, political prisoners still
- languish in cells decades after their arrests
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by James Carney/Miami, Aidan Hartley/
- Nairobi, and Farah Nayeri/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Some countries, like China, have been known to mete out
- swift execution to their political prisoners. Others, like
- Cuba, imprison them for decades. Indonesia has a uniquely cruel
- approach. As early as this week, the Jakarta government intends
- to execute six men for their alleged roles in a 1965 coup
- attempt--after keeping them behind bars for anywhere from 18
- to 24 years. In February four other purported conspirators were
- sent before the firing squad. Those killings prompted a burst
- of protest from overseas, but despite the outcry the government
- is going ahead with its plan. According to a close confidant
- of Indonesian President Suharto's, the next round of executions
- may take place as soon as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan ends
- on April 25. Said he: "Their request for clemency has been
- rejected, so they will die."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the waves of liberalization that have swept across
- the world in the past year, thousands of political prisoners
- still sit in cells from Singapore to Syria. Some have been
- there for more than 27 years, the time served by South Africa's
- Nelson Mandela, the world's most famous detainee until his
- release in February. Among the longest-serving political
- prisoners:
- </p>
- <p>CUBA
- </p>
- <qt> <l>-- Mario Chanes de Armas detained since July 17, 1961</l>
- <l>-- Ernesto Diaz Rodriguez detained since Dec. 4, 1968</l>
- </qt>
- <p> These two men are the last of Cuba's plantados historicos
- (literally "the historically planted"), political prisoners so
- dubbed for their long terms and unyielding defiance of the
- authorities.
- </p>
- <p> Chanes, 63, and Diaz, 51, were among Fidel Castro's original
- companeros, but after the Communists took control of Cuba in
- 1959, the two former guerrillas became disenchanted. Chanes,
- a security guard who served briefly in the revolutionary
- government, began to criticize Castro; Diaz, a fisherman and
- bus driver, joined a paramilitary dissident group in Miami. In
- 1961 Chanes was arrested for plotting to assassinate Castro,
- a charge human-rights groups believe was trumped up. Although
- Chanes' 30-year sentence expires next year, his former prison
- mates doubt he will be set free. Diaz was seized in 1968, while
- attempting to smuggle counterrevolutionaries and supplies into
- Cuba. He was sentenced to a total of 40 years in prison.
- </p>
- <p> Chanes and Diaz are kept in isolation at the Combinado del
- Este prison on the outskirts of Havana in a windowless cell so
- tiny they have no room to walk. Both are said to be in failing
- health.
- </p>
- <p>INDONESIA
- </p>
- <p>-- Iskandar Subekti detained since July 31, 1968
- </p>
- <p> Iskandar, 69, is among an estimated 50 Indonesians who
- remain in prison for their alleged complicity in the 1965
- putsch against then President Sukarno. The uprising was
- launched by junior army officers purportedly in concert with
- senior members of the now outlawed Indonesian Communist Party.
- The six detainees expected to be put to death soon are Iskandar
- and Ruslan Widjayasastra, 72, both party Central Committee
- members; I. Bungkus, 61, a sergeant in Sukarno's elite security
- guard; Marsudi, 53, a sergeant major in the air force; Sukatno,
- 61, chairman of the party's youth organization; and Asep
- Suryaman, 62, an alleged member of the party's "special
- bureau," which was responsible for building links with the
- military. Since 1985, at least 20 prisoners have been executed
- for alleged involvement in the long-ago uprising or for
- membership in the Communist Party.
- </p>
- <p>MALAWI
- </p>
- <p>-- Martin Machipisa Munthali detained since sometime in 1965
- </p>
- <p> Munthali, then an apparatchik in the ruling Malawi Congress
- Party, fled the country in 1964 with a group of dissident
- Cabinet Ministers. From abroad they organized a movement to
- oppose the despotic Hastings Kamuzu Banda, then Malawi's Prime
- Minister and since 1971 President for Life. Munthali, who is
- in his early 60s, reportedly returned to Malawi in 1965 and was
- arrested. By some accounts, Munthali was never tried. According
- to others, he was charged with a firearms offense, served an
- eleven-year prison term, was immediately detained again when
- it expired and has been held since without charge or trial in
- the Mikuyu prison near Zomba. In the early years of his
- detention, Munthali's jailers reportedly applied gasoline to
- his legs and ignited them, causing injuries that were not
- treated. Today he shares a single cell--with a bucket for a
- toilet--with some 30 other political prisoners.
- </p>
- <p>SINGAPORE
- </p>
- <p>-- Chia Thye Poh detained since Oct. 29, 1966
- </p>
- <p> Chia, 49, was a member of Parliament representing the
- opposition Barisan Sosialis (Socialist Front) when he was
- arrested for allegedly advocating armed struggle against the
- government of Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew. Over the years,
- Singapore officials offered to free Chia, who has never been
- tried, if he would renounce violence. But he refused,
- maintaining that he had never espoused it in the first place.
- Last May Chia was sent into a bizarre internal exile on Sentosa,
- a tiny tourist island just off Singapore's main isle. He is
- allowed visitors and free run of the island, where he is the
- only permanent inhabitant, but he cannot leave it, address
- public meetings or take part in any political activity without
- official approval.
- </p>
- <p>SYRIA
- </p>
- <p>-- Salah Jadid detained since Nov. 13, 1970
- </p>
- <p> When Lieut. General Hafez Assad seized power in Damascus in
- a 1970 military coup, he locked up many members of the previous
- regime, who are still behind bars. Eighteen people--including
- Jadid, who was the strongman of the earlier government--have
- remained in prison without charge or trial since their arrests
- between 1970 and 1972. Though the detainees, who are held in
- the notoriously grim Mezze military prison near Damascus, are
- allowed visitors, President Assad's government does not
- acknowledge that they are imprisoned.
- </p>
- <p> Aside from Jadid, 62--who served as the assistant
- secretary general of the regional command of the Baath Party,
- the ruling party then as well as now--the more prominent of
- the 18 include Noureddine Attassi, 60, who was President and
- Prime Minister, and Mohammed Id Ashawi, 59, the Minister of
- Foreign Affairs. All the inmates are said to be in poor health
- because of inadequate medical care and, in some cases, the
- effects of torture. Some reportedly are victims of the "German
- chair," a modern-day torture rack used by Syria.
- </p>
- <p>MOROCCO
- </p>
- <p>-- Fatima Oufkir and family detained since Aug. 20, 1972
- </p>
- <p> The Oufkirs are victims of vengeance at its most perverse.
- Fatima Oufkir's husband, General Mohammed Oufkir, was Morocco's
- Defense Minister when air force leaders unsuccessfully
- attempted to assassinate King Hassan II on Aug. 16, 1972.
- General Oufkir was accused of complicity and the next day was
- found shot dead. Four days later, Fatima, now 54, the six
- Oufkir children, who now range in age from 21 to 37, and
- Fatima's cousin Achoura Chenna, 54, were put under house arrest
- and have been held since then without explanation, charge or
- trial in various houses and farms.
- </p>
- <p> From 1974 to 1977, the family was reportedly kept in almost
- total darkness. For the next ten years, they were held
- incommunicado in separate, windowless cells. In the past few
- years, the conditions of the family's detention have improved.
- In 1987 King Hassan agreed to let them immigrate to Canada but
- then reneged on the deal.
- </p>
- <p> In an age of instant communications, when the freeing of
- Mandela is viewed by millions of people, public pressure can
- influence some repressive regimes. Human-rights activists
- believe Singapore improved the conditions of Chia Thye Poh's
- confinement out of fear that when South Africa released
- Mandela, world attention would focus on the remaining
- long-termers. Still, other governments seem impervious to
- criticism. "Each country is a separate case," notes Richard
- Reoch, information director of London-based Amnesty
- International. There are limits too to how hard foreign
- governments will press allies on human-rights issues. The U.S.,
- for example, remained mute over the February executions in
- Indonesia. Yet while international pressure may not always
- work, it is the political prisoner's only protection.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-