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World's worst regimes unveiled
Freedomhouse.org
March 31, 2005
http://www.freedomhouse.org/media/pressrel/033105.htm
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GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
- Freedom House today released its annual list of the world's most
repressive regimes at the United Nations Commission on Human Rights.
Six are members of the UN body, charged with monitoring and condemning
human rights violations.
The report,
"The Worst of the Worst: The World's Most Repressive Societies 2005,"
includes detailed summations of the dire human rights situations
in Belarus, Burma (Myanmar), China, Cuba, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea,
Haiti, Laos, Libya, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria,
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe. Chechnya, Tibet,
and Western Sahara are included as territories under Russian, Chinese,
and Moroccan jurisdictions respectively.
Significantly,
six of the eighteen most repressive governments--those of China,
Cuba, Eritrea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and Zimbabwe--are members of
the Commission on Human Rights (CHR), representing nearly 11 percent
of the 53-member body.
"Repressive
governments enjoying CHR membership work in concert and have successfully
subverted the Commission's mandate," said Freedom House Executive
Director Jennifer Windsor. "Rather than serving as the proper international
forum for identifying and publicly censuring the world's most egregious
human rights violators, the CHR instead protects abusers, enabling
them to sit in judgment of democratic states that honor and respect
the rule of law," she said.
A report issued
March 21 by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan acknowledged that the
presence of these nations on the CHR has dealt a severe blow to
the UN body's credibility. Mr. Annan recommended that states elected
to a reformed "Human Rights Council" be chosen based on their compliance
with the "highest human rights standards."
"The Secretary
General's recommendation is welcome: the solution to restoring the
UN human rights panel's credibility lies in the establishment of
strict membership criteria," said Ms. Windsor. "In the short-term,
however, it is incumbent upon the CHR's democratic member states
to work together as an effective bloc that upholds the Commission's
mandate by strengthening and promoting human rights and democracy."
An additional
nine countries Freedom House rates as "Not Free" enjoy membership
on the Commission: Bhutan, Egypt, Guinea, Mauritania, Pakistan,
Qatar, Russia, Swaziland, and Togo. Together, "Not Free" countries
comprise just over one quarter of the Commission's membership. A
breakdown by Freedom House ranking of CHR members available.
The "Worst of
the Worst" report is excerpted from Freedom House's forthcoming
annual global survey, Freedom in the World 2005. The countries deemed
the most repressive earn some of the worst numerical ratings according
to the survey's methodology, which measures the state of political
rights and civil liberties worldwide, and classifies countries as
Free, Partly Free, or Not Free.
*Freedom
House is a non-governmental organization in consultative status
with the United Nations.
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