James
D. Gwartney and Robert A. Lawson : ECONOMIC FREEDOM OF THE WORLD,
Table
III-C: The Use of Conscription to Obtain Military Personnel, 1974-1995.
Exercise
of the right of conscientious objection to military service in Council of
Europe member states
(Report on CO in Europe) Excerpts.
WRI Survey /Refusing to Bear Arms/ Registration is required
Simon, J.: Transforming the Armed Forces of Central and East Europe (Strategic
Forum, 2000. June, No 172)
Military
manpower - fit for military service
In each year, male citizens reaching 18 are to be drafted for military service of 2 years. If not drafted immediately, they remain liable to draft until 22 years old. Female citizens of the same age range may also be drafted based on military demands. Full-time students are eligible for deferments. The conscription is selective and who is actually drafted is not known exactly. As Falun Gong is strictly banned, its members are barred from serving the military.
For Chinese Special Administrative Regions (SARs) - Hong Kong and Macao - there is no conscription.
The compulsory National Service is actually suspended (law October 97) for
anyone born after December 31st, 1978. The actual Army obligations of any
person (boy & girls) is to get registered, and to spend a day to be "selected".
People not doing so can't
take a national exam (including driving license) until 25 but this
"punishment" is cancelled as soon as they submit. The possibility of being
a CO is suspended as well ! But for the one remaining (older), it is possible
to avoid any National Service being CO.
Conscription was abolished 2001.06.27. /Wordnews, BBC/
The situation in November 2001
Civil service /only for health reason/ 28 months
Conscription 9 months service, 2002: 6 months
1999 46000 males are processed and evaluated for duty, of those 19000
are assigned to positions within the defence forces and 16000 start their
training (because some had been assigned to units which were disbanded).
2000 Government suggest the introduction of female conscription too, and
it seems possible it'll get introduced, but in July it turns out the
proposal was rather for discussion only.
Source: Urban: History of conscription in Sweden
Taiwan Nation without Conscription! (Campaign against conscription by the Republic of China)
Taipei
Times, 2000.04.26. Conscription is harming Taiwan
****************
Antigua and Barbuda
Australia
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belgium
Belize
Botswana
Brunei Darussalam
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Canada
Costa Rica
Djibouti
Fiji
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Grenada
Haiti
Hong Kong
Iceland
India
Ireland
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kenya
Kyrgyzstan
Lesotho
Luxembourg
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Malta
Mauritania
Mauritius
Monaco
Myanmar
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Nigeria
Oman
Pakistan
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Qatar
Rwanda
San Marino
Saudi Arabia
Sierra Leone
South Africa
Sri Lanka
Suriname
Swaziland
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Uganda
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland
United States of America
Uruguay
Vanuatu
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Argentina
Benin
Bhutan
Central African Republic
Chad
China
Honduras
Indonesia
Côte d'Ivoire
Mali
Niger
Senegal
Togo
El Salvador
Namibia
Angola
Austria
Belarus
Brazil
Bulgaria
Cape Verde
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Federal Republic of
Germany
Finland
France
Hungary
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Ukraine
(a) On a legal basis
Croatia
Yugoslavia
(b) On an ad hoc basis
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Russian Federation
Switzerland
Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
Bolivia
Cambodia
Chile
China
Colombia
Cuba
Democratic People's
Republic of Korea
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
Equatorial Guinea
Ethiopia
Greece
Guatemala
Guinea-Bissau
Honduras
Georgia
Guinea
Iran (Islamic Republic of)
Iraq
Israel
Kazakstan
Lao People's Democratic
Republic
Lebanon
Liberia
Libyan Arab Jamahirya
Madagascar
Mexico
Mongolia
Morocco
Mozambique
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Republic of Korea
Romania (a draft law on
alternative service has been
submitted)
Singapore
Somalia
Sudan
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Venezuela
Viet Nam
Yemen
*******************
Report on CO in Europe.
Exercise of the right
of conscientious objection to military service in Council of Europe member
states
Doc. 8809 13 July 2000 Report
Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights
Rapporteur: Mr Dick Marty, Switzerland, Liberal, Democratic and Reformers' Group
Excerpts:
... For all these reasons, the Assembly recommends that the right to conscientious
objection to military service be incorporated into the European Convention
on Human Rights,
on the eve of the 50th anniversary of its signature, and that states
take the necessary steps
to ensure respect for this right.
I. Draft recommendation
1. The Assembly recalls its Resolution 337 (1967) and its
Recommendation 816 (1977)
on the right of conscientious objection and the right of conscientious
objection to military
service respectively, and also Recommendation No. R (87) 8 of the
Committee of Ministers.
It notes that the exercise of the right of conscientious objection
to military service has been
an on-going concern of the Council of Europe for over thirty years.
2. The right of conscientious objection is a fundamental
aspect of the right to freedom
of thought, conscience and religion enshrined in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights
and the European Convention on Human Rights.
5. The Assembly accordingly recommends that the Committee
of Ministers invite those
member states which have not yet done so to introduce into their
legislation:
i. the right to be registered as a conscientious objector
at any time before,
during or after conscription, or performance of military
service;
ii. the right for permanent members of the armed forces
to apply for the
granting of conscientious objector status;
iii. the right for all conscripts to receive information
on conscientious objector
status and the means of obtaining it;
iv. genuine alternative service, which should be neither
deterrent nor punitive in
character.
6. The Assembly also recommends that the Committee of Ministers
incorporate the
right of conscientious objection to military service into the European
Convention on Human
Rights by means of a protocol amending Articles 4.3.b and 9.
II. Explanatory memorandum by Mr Marty, Rapporteur
.........
B. General points concerning the right of conscientious objection
to military
service in Europe
4. The debate on the right of conscientious objection may
seem superfluous at a time
when a number of European countries are abolishing national service
in favour of fully
professional armies. Nevertheless, compulsory military service (conscription)
still exists in
most Council of Europe member states. It has either been abolished
or has never existed in
Andorra, Belgium, Ireland, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta,
the Netherlands, the
United Kingdom and San Marino. Spain will be putting an end to conscription
on 31
December 2002 at the latest; France will follow suit on 1 January
2003. The Netherlands still
has a law on conscription, but this contains no provisions on the
performance of military
service. Recruits are no longer called for medical examination, and
the last conscripts were
called up in February 1996, to do six months' service. In Italy,
the government has introduced
a bill for gradual abolition of compulsory military service and for
the establishment of a
professional army. Eastern Europe is not exempt from the trend, which
may lead to
increased reliance on regular servicemen and the end of compulsory
military service in the
Czech Republic, Poland and Ukraine.
... In several Eastern European countries (Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova,
Russia and
Ukraine), conscripts frequently avoid doing military service. In
these countries between 10
and 20% of conscripts on average are actually enlisted for military
service. Since all
defaulters cannot be prosecuted, some states make an example of only
a few by bringing
them to court, or declare amnesties (Russia and Ukraine).
...........
b. Absolute objectors and prison sentences
27. "Absolute objectors", i.e. those who refuse to perform
both military service and any
type of alternative service, pose a special problem. Failure to report
for duty when first called
up is usually punishable as such, or as desertion, under the military
offences code or the
criminal code. European countries� laws on penalties which may be
imposed on recognised
conscientious objectors who refuse to perform alternative service
differ widely. Many Eastern
European countries, which have no specific criminal laws on such
cases, simply apply the law
on failure to do military service to conscientious objectors (Russia
and Ukraine). Most,
however, have inserted specific provisions in their criminal legislation
in this field (Sweden).
The penalty that may be imposed is either the same as that imposed
for failure to report for
duty or, sometimes, less harsh (Finland). Germany has found a general
solution to the
problem of absolute objection by exempting recognised objectors from
compulsory civilian
service if they can show that they are, or will be, employed for
a definite time by a charitable
association working in the health sector.
28. Rejection of all compulsory service, civilian or military,
cannot be accepted in legal
systems which provide for compulsory service, since this would be
tantamount to privileging
certain groups (particularly Jehovah's Witnesses), and would flagrantly
violate the principle of
the equality of citizens before the law. Swiss law stipulates that
anyone who refuses to
perform both military and civilian service must do some form of compulsory
work. If a country
insists on imposing prison sentences, the sentence must in all cases
be short and entail no
unduly harsh conditions of detention.