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U.N.:
"Who's Who" of Human Rights Abuse
Human Rights
Watch
April 03, 2003
http://www.hrw.org/press/2003/04/un040303.htm
"This year's
election already looks like a who's who of the worst human rights
abusers. Governments that care about human rights have to act to
prevent the Commission from being hijacked."
Rory Mungoven,
Global Advocacy Director, Human Rights Watch
The United Nations
Commission on Human Rights risks being turned into a "who's
who" of abusive governments if several candidates for membership
are elected later this month, Human Rights Watch warned today.
Of the 53 members
of the commission, 24 will be elected for two-year terms by the
U.N. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in late April. Several
governments have already announced their candidacy.
"This year's election already looks like a who's who of the
worst human rights abusers," said Rory Mungoven, global advocacy
director of Human Rights Watch. "Governments that care about
human rights have to act to prevent the Commission from being hijacked."
Human Rights
Watch advocates minimum criteria for membership in the Commission,
such as:
- ratification
of the main human rights treaties;
- prompt reporting
to U.N. human rights bodies;
- issuing open
invitations to U.N. human rights investigators.
Countries should
be disqualified from membership if they have been condemned by the
Commission for serious human rights violations in the recent past,
Human Rights Watch said.
Among the worrisome
candidates:
- North Korea
is bidding for one of six seats assigned to the Asian Group, despite
being one of the most repressive and closed regimes in the world;
- Cuba is among
the candidates agreed upon by the Latin American group, despite
its severe recent crackdown on dissidents and its refusal to cooperate
with numerous resolutions passed by the Commission on Human Rights;
- Russia is
slated for one of two seats open for Eastern Europe, despite its
refusal to admit U.N. experts to investigate abuses in Chechnya;
- Egypt is
likely to be put forward by the African group, despite its abysmal
record of torture and ill-treatment of detainees, demonstrated
only last week in its detention of anti-war demonstrators.
Candidates are
put forward by the different regional groups. Elections will be
held for seven African, six Asian, six Latin American, three Western
and two East European seats. In cases where the number of candidates
equals the number of the vacant seats, the election will be a formality.
Human Rights
Watch called on the five regional groups to remove from their endorsed
lists any candidates who have poor human rights records and who
fail to cooperate with the Commission. It urged governments with
positive human rights credentials to stand for election and help
to restore the integrity of the Commission.
Human Rights
Watch also warned that many western governments currently serving
on the Commission need to lift their own standards. For instance,
the United States has not ratified all the key conventions and Australia
has refused to cooperate with U.N. treaty bodies. Twenty-one members
of the western group have issued standing invitations to U.N. human
rights experts.
The High Commissioner
for Human Rights, Sergio Vieira de Mello, in his report to the current
session of the Commission on Human Rights, also stressed the need
for a code of guidelines for membership of the Commission and a
code of conduct for members while they serve on the Commission.
Several governments
have said they support membership criteria and will apply standards
of this kind in considering others for election. In the past three
years, at least 45 states have issued standing invitations to the
Commission's human rights monitors.
"No member
of the Commission has a perfectly clean record on human rights.
But they should at least show an openness to scrutiny," Mungoven
said.
See Also: U.N.:
Setback on Human Rights Votes - April 16, 2003
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