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Human Rights Organizations Send Letter to Secretary Rice
in Support of a UN Human Rights Council
Citizens for Global Solutions joined leading human rights and
democracy organizations to urge the United States to support the new Human
Rights Council (HRC), which would replace the discredited Commission on Human
Rights. In a letter addressed to Secretary Condoleezza Rice, the organizations
wrote that although the new Council is not as strong as human rights advocates
had hoped, it is a step in the right direction for strengthening human rights at
the UN. The letter also stated that walking away from the proposal
or trying to change it could jeopardize important progress already made.
There is no doubt that the new Human Rights Council will be better than the
Commission on Human Rights. It will meet regularly throughout the year,
unlike the Commission that only met for six weeks each year. Furthermore, the
members of the Council will be required to undergo a peer review on its human
rights practices.
However, the main concern about the new Council is the process by which its
members will be elected. Earlier proposals included a provision requiring
two-thirds majority support of the General Assembly for membership on the
Council, which would have effectively shunned some of the world’s worst abusers
of human rights. Unfortunately, ultimately, this proposal was not included.
According to the current resolution that would establish the Council, members
will be elected by 50% of the 191 countries who are members of the United
Nations.
On Monday, the United States called the proposal for the new Human Rights
Council unacceptable and vowed to vote against it unless negotiations were
re-opened. The U.S. is right to be disappointed in the resolution, but the blame
for this disappointment falls on Ambassador John Bolton. When negotiations on
the Council re-opened after the World Summit in September, Ambassador Bolton did
not even attend the negotiations over the Council. And in the final weeks, while
key diplomats in the State Department were advocating for the 2/3 support
requirement for membership, Ambassador Bolton promoted his own unachievable
goals for the Council.
If the U.S. is intent on reopening negotiations on the Human Rights Council, it
must have a clear plan to improve it. Further, that plan must be embraced and
put into action at all levels of the State Department, from Secretary Rice to
Ambassador Bolton.
Updated March 2, 2006
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