A recent report of Geneva-based Inter-Parliamentary Union on "Violations of the Human Rights of MPs-2015," which releases figures and trends on the cases being examined by its Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians, has found that the number of MPs with alleged violations of their human rights has increased for the second year in a row.
The IPU is the global organisation of national parliaments. It works to safeguard peace and drives positive democratic change through political dialogue and concrete action. Created in 1976, the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians is a unique body that works to provide redress for MPs whose rights have been violated.
During 2015, the IPU Committee worked on cases involving 320 MPs in 43 countries, up from 311 cases in 40 countries in 2014 and 270 cases in 40 countries in 2013.
Overwhelmingly, the targeted MPs are men (283) and more than two thirds of all cases (71 per cent) are from the political opposition (228).
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Asia, which maintains its ranking as the second most dangerous place for an MP, has seen a worrying jump in the number of alleged violations. Of the 21 MPs with new cases brought before the IPU Committee this year, 15 are in Asia.
The 2015 data said the Middle East and North Africa
region ranked third with 17 per cent of all cases, followed by the Americas at 13 per cent and Europe 5 per cent. The Pacific region is the only part of the world with no case of alleged violations being examined by IPU.
"This is a trend that should worry each and everyone of us because if those who are responsible for defending the rights of the people are themselves being persecuted, then everyone's rights are under threat," he said.
The assassination of at least eight MPs this year, mainly in Somalia but also in Afghanistan, Kenya and Yemen, although not referred to the IPU Committee, underlines the very real danger many MPs live with on a daily basis.
2015, however, saw a much higher rate of success in resolving cases. Of the 54 cases that were closed in the year, 38 were resolved satisfactorily and underlined the value of the Committee's dogged public or discreet diplomatic work to find solutions.