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DATE=4/7/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=U-N / SUMMARY EXECUTIONS (L-ONLY) NUMBER=2-261056 BYLINE=LISA SCHLEIN DATELINE=GENEVA CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: A United Nations special investigator says there has been an increase in extra-judicial killings by governments and armed groups around the world. Lisa Schlein reports the investigator submitted her findings to the U-N Human Rights Commission in Geneva. TEXT: The U-N investigator, Pakistani lawyer Asma Jahangir, says she believes the cases brought to her attention are only a fraction of the increasing number of extra-judicial, summary or arbitrary executions. In the past year, she says she sent urgent warnings about possible threats to hundreds of people in more than 40 countries. Ms. Jahangir says the chief targets of extra-judicial killings include human rights and political activists, journalists and members of various minorities. She says more and more oppressive governments are using what she calls "non-state actors" -- unofficial militant forces -- to deal with individuals or groups who challenge their authority. /// JAHANGIR ACT ONE /// Sometimes it's very difficult to link them to governments, [to] the role of the intelligence services that actually support and patronize these non-state actors who are now being used to violate -- and the governments use them very successfully -- to get away from being accountable to what is happening. /// END ACT /// Ms. Jahangir says there is evidence that more and more countries are permitting so-called "honor killings" -- cases in which women are killed because they are perceived to have shamed their families. She says she has received reports of honor killings in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Turkey, Peru, Jordan and Israel, among others. The U-N investigator says she has reports of about 25 honor killings a year in Jordan, and 300 a year in Pakistan. /// JAHANGIR ACT TWO /// In Pakistan, the situation has not changed on the ground at all. There is almost every single day, one honor killing. And, every third day there is rhetoric about doing something about honor killing. But, to this day, nothing has been done. /// END ACT /// In 90 percent of the cases, Ms. Jahangir says, people are killed by or on orders from their own family. And usually, she says, the killers go free. She says honor killings also have been reported in some western countries, notably Norway, Britain and Italy. She says these largely non-Muslim countries do little to outlaw the practice, because of so-called "cultural sensitivity." She says the western countries bow to perceived traditional values of Islamic countries, which she says is not correct. (Signed) NEB/LS/JWH/WTW 07-Apr-2000 15:11 PM EDT (07-Apr-2000 1911 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .