ASEAN Governance: Is There a Role for Civil Society?
Panel discussion report by Farid Khan[1] and Rosalia Sciortino Sumaryono[2]
On 12 October 2016, SEA Junction organized a panel discussion titled
“ASEAN Governance: Is There a Role for Civil Society?” in partnership
with the Heinrich Böll Stiftung Southeast Asia. More than 70
participants, many of them from Southeast Asia, filled SEA Junction
premises at the Bangkok Art and Cultural Centre (BACC) in Bangkok,
Thailand to eagerly listen to the speakers and exchange views on the
challenge of establishing a more representative governance system for
ASEAN as a “people-centered” inter-governmental institution.
The panel was chaired by Rosalia Sciortino Sumaryono,
Founder and Executive Director of SEA Junction and Associate Professor,
Institute for Population and Social Research (IPSR), Mahidol University
and consisted of speakers from academia and civil society and a
representative of the ASEAN Secretariat, whose unit oversees relations
with civil society organizations (CSOs). Respectively, they were Moe Thuzar
Fellow, Lead Researcher (Socio-Cultural Affairs), ASEAN Studies Centre
and Coordinator, Myanmar Studies Programme; Charles Hector, Human Rights
Defender and Member of the Malaysian Bar and Romeo Arca Jr., Assistant Director/Head of the ASEAN Secretariat’s Community Relations Division.
After welcoming all those in attendance, the Chair framed the
discussion topic by stating that although progress has been made towards
more close-tied regionalism and more sophisticated mechanisms for joint
governance, ASEAN relationship with civil society remains fraught with
tensions. While ASEAN is keen to collaborate with the business sector
and closely engage with it at all levels, civil society groups have
little space to formally interact with ASEAN with the possible exception
of the ASEAN Civil Society Conference/ASEAN Peoples’ Forum (ACSC/APF)
and a number of commissions with limited authority devoted to specific
topics and groups namely the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human
Rights (AICHR) Meetings, the ASEAN Commission on the Promotion and
Protection of the Rights of Women and Children (ACWC) Meetings and the
ASEAN Forum on Migrant Labour. At the same time, civil society groups
are struggling to find an effective strategy on how to engage with ASEAN
processes and how to advance their demand for representation in overall
ASEAN governance structures, beyond the formality of the annual ASEAN
leaders-CSO interface of less than one hour. As an illustration of
worsening relation, the last ACSC/APF took place in Dili, Timor Leste
instead of in Laos as it would have been customary and the usual ASEAN
leaders-CSO interface was dropped at the Vientiane Summit.
Taking it from these introductory comments, the first panelist Moe Thuzar
provided the broader picture of ASEAN-civil society interaction. She
noted that since civil society started to be reckoned as a significant
force in the region about 30 years ago, ASEAN’s relationship with NGOs,
think thanks, academic institutions and other similar entities has been
uneasy notwithstanding that in ASEAN documents the vision is to engage
them at various levels. She stressed that the expectations on the two
sides diverge on how civil society should be engaged in
inter-governmental processes, with ASEAN expecting civil society to
support ASEAN decisions and civil society wanting to have a larger role
in consultation and decision-making processes. When ASEAN interacts with
civil society groups it is mostly in a functional and pragmatic way
making use of their technical expertise and/or their presence on the
ground, such as in the control of infectious diseases or during
post-disaster rehabilitation efforts.
A greater role for civil society and more attention to human rights
is limited by the diversity of national positions, since ASEAN governs
by consensus and ‘non-interference in the internal affairs of one
another’. It is important to realize in this context that the way ASEAN
relates to civil society reflects the relationship of individual Member
States with their citizens. Also ASEAN bureaucratic processes are
lengthy and it takes time to shift positions and move a specific agenda
forward in view of the many push and pull factors in reaching consensus.
For progress to happen it will have to be at multiple levels and entail
strengthening of quality relationship between governments and between
governments and their citizens as well as of the process mechanisms
themselves.
In spite of the overwhelming challenges, NGOs, academic institutions
and think tanks should not dismiss the importance of a more proactive
participation and continue to work at the national as well as at the
regional level to ensure civil society becomes an integral part of the
future of ASEAN. In doing so, they need to take a long-term approach. To
show that change is possible, albeit it takes time, Moe Thuzar
concluded citing Myanmar as example: from 2007 to 2014 Myanmar has made
exponential progress in expanding accountability and civil society voice
as evidenced in the World Bank Governance Index for ASEAN countries.
Three panelists in the discussion (left to right) Moe Thuzar, Romeo Arca Jr. and Charles Hector with panel chair
In his follow-up presentation of ASEAN position, Romeo Arca Jr agreed
with Moe Thuzar that ASEAN formally recognizes the value of civil
society engagement as vital to the political, economic and
socio-cultural communities that constitute the three pillars of ASEAN.
The main institutional reference is Article 16 of the ASEAN Charter
stating that “ASEAN may engage with entities which support the ASEAN
Charter in particular its purposes and principles” wherein the term
“entities” implies all organizations that are not government bodies
including parliamentarians, think tanks, academic organizations,
business organizations and CSOs. This translates into commitment to
engagement with civil society in higher levels and, in Arca’s view, the
cancellation of the ASEAN Leaders-CSO interface in Laos will likely not
be repeated next year when the Philippines holds the chairmanship of
ASEAN.
That said, Romeo Arca Jr also shared the view of the previous speaker
that more needs to be done to establish an enabling environment for
meaningful and constructive interaction. Two key issues require
attention to this end: firstly, for civil society to engage with ASEAN
they need to adhere to the “Rules of Procedure and Criteria for
Engagement for Entities Associated with ASEAN” set out in 2014 by the
Committee of Permanent Representatives to ASEAN (CPR) in accordance with
the ASEAN Charter. CSOs and other entities that want to be associated
and engage with ASEAN have to apply for accreditation and this requires
an endorsement from the relevant ASEAN Organ and/or Sectoral Body
besides meeting a number of criteria proving their accountability and
strategic expertise. Agreed modalities include dialogue, consultation,
interface, seminar, workshop and forum and, once accepted, it is up to
ASEAN to decide upon review whether the association may continue or be
ended.
Second, engagement of civil society happens more deeply at the
sectoral level such as in agriculture, health or tourism. It is at that
level that there is more space for entities to become involved and where
gradually more space is being shaped. It remains challenging to engage
civil society in the overall governance of ASEAN since Member States
seems to take the fact that ASEAN is an inter-governmental body to
exclude representation of non-government entities. He concluded that for
more space to open up it will require a change of position and the
setting up of mechanisms that engage civil society in governance in a
win-win situation.
The last panel speaker, Charles Hector questioned
some of the assumptions and statements of previous presentations
starting from an analysis of the different interpretations of the
term“civil society” used to group together very diverse organizations
including NGOs, community groups, trade unions, foundations.
professional organizations, religious associations, and justice and
human rights organizations (more recently renamed human rights
defenders). ASEAN leaves the definition quite open focusing on
“non-profit organisation of ASEAN entities, natural or juridical, that
promote, strengthen and help realise the aims and objectives of the
ASEAN Community and its three Pillars”. Yet, a look at the
organizations recognized so far will show that advocacy and human rights
groups are lacking.
Interestingly, by embracing also natural CSOs, ASEAN takes a more
progressive stand than their Member States in recognizing that most CSOs
in Southeast Asia, and especially those concerned with justice and
human rights, are not registered being often of a temporary nature to
act speedily for a cause; because of complex and controlling
registration processes; and also due to weariness of State intervention.
ASEAN’s seemingly inclusive approach, however, does not translate into
practice. For accreditation, the minimum requirement consists of a copy
of registration papers and financial statements, and since “natural”
CSOs lack such papers, their proclaimed recognition by ASEAN does not
actually happen. As Hector emphatically stated in Malaysian “Cakap tak serupa bikin” (Action is not same as talk).
Government practices in the region also reveal that ASEAN Member
States are not ready to engage with CSOs and uphold human rights.
Individually they are not really open to alternative views and have
restrictions to the exercise of freedom of expression and opinion and of
the right to gathering and peaceful assembly. Regionally, ASEAN’s
tenets of consensus and of non-interference preclude individual members
as well as ASEAN as a whole from expressing disapproval of human rights
violations in the region. It is therefore a question whether there is
any value for CSOs to try to engage ASEAN to end injustice and human
rights abuses that are happening in ASEAN Member States.
On the side of the CSOs, the transformation and professionalization
of CSOs from volunteer and often self-funded groups to sophisticated
organizations increasingly specialized and dependent on donor funding is
leading to the marginalization of more grass-roots and
advocacy-oriented entities. Few well-funded organizations monopolize the
debate and engagement with ASEAN , claiming to ‘represent’ civil
society at the exclusion of smaller, and often more vocal, groups.
Barriers to participation are also the high costs of ASEAN venues and of
travel and lodging and the use of English full with acronyms and
references not understandable to more local institutions and most
ordinary persons. Collective action is also challenged by CSOs’
increasing specialization and their sectoral focus limited to advancing a
particular cause (say indigenous rights, LBGT rights, women’s rights or
freedom of expression) rather than broader rights and governance
issues.
A worrysome change is that the nature of ACSC/APF has been
transformed. Initially the forum served to bring as many CSOs together
to discuss, debate and formulate a common stand and demands to be handed
over to ASEAN and its Member States and, more recently, also to be
expressed orally in the added interface of CSO representatives and
ASEAN. However, in the last two fora in 2015 in Kuala Lumpur and 2016 in
Timor Leste the statement was sent to ASEAN even before the
participants arrived. The latest two CSO Statements have become “very
ASEAN friendly” no more daring to highlighting wrongs and making
specific demands, and the forum itself has become more a place for
governments and ASEAN to speak to CSOs rather than the other way around.
Engagement with ASEAN to remain real and meaningful may have to occur
outside of ACSC/APF and other formal processes. The focus of CSOs may
need to change, not just focusing on “ASEAN” per se, but rather to
build solidarity among CSOs of ASEAN Member States (and beyond) to
challenge injustices happening in one country or even in one factory or
community. The role of CSOs is in this context is not to compromise
their principles and causes to please ASEAN or governments, but to
empower and develop greater support in the struggle for human rights and
justice, not just amongst CSOs but among the peoples of ASEAN.
Governments cannot ignore the will of their people, likewise ASEAN. The
methodology of engagement needs to change towards engaging ASEAN people
instead of only engaging ASEAN, ASEAN Committees and Working Groups and
ASEAN governments if we want to realize an ASEAN Community led by its
people.
The follow-up discussion among the participants and with the
panelists continued the debate on what can be realistically expected by
ASEAN in view of its modalities of consensus and non-interference as
well as the shrinking space for civil society in the region. In
conclusion, the Chair summarized the various positions and reflected
that the engagement of civil society is not for the sake of engagement
itself but finalized to the greater goal of changing society for the
benefits of disadvantaged and excluded groups.
In this context, civil society groups will need to diversify their
strategies wedging whether for the particular issue they wish to promote
it is strategic to engage with ASEAN within its limited parameters or
it makes more sense to work outside of ASEAN scope concentrating at the
national level in devising collaborations with the media and other
potential advocates to advance their causes with the public and with
their governments. In the realization that the socio-economic and
political environment in each country shape Member States’ positions in
ASEAN, work needs to be directed at national change. Whether the
optimistic view of better times for ASEAN- civil society interaction
with the Philippines taking up the ASEAN Chair –as traditionally could
be expected– is justified is still to be seen in view of the current
rights averse climate in the Philippines.
For now, the more central issue of ensuring democratic governance at
ASEAN on terms that allow for a diversity of position will require a
longer term commitment and a multitude of approaches and innovations.
There will need to be self-reflection of all parties involved on what
can be done to carve more space for a genuine dialogue that do not
necessarily require civil society to conform. At the end of the day, if
ASEAN is to achieve inclusive and more equitable growth new governance
and decision-mechanisms, developed by all relevant parties, will need to
be put in place to guarantee representation of and accountability to
the most disadvantaged. Moreover, ASEAN’s vision of a people-oriented
regional community can only be realized with the acknowledgement of
different views and positions and the representation of the diverse
constituencies that compose this complex region.
[1] Farid Khan, Independent Researcher, SEA Junction Volunteer
[2]
Rosalia Sciortino Sumaryono, Founder and Executive Director SEA
Junction (www.seajunction.org) and Associate Professor Institute for
Population and Social Research (IPSR), Mahidol University
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