40 MPs & NGOs protest Chavez election today
40 MPs & NGOs protest Chavez election today
to U.N.'s top rights
body
Coalition from 19 countries
including US, France, UK, Canada, Switzerland, Bahrain,
Guinea, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, Somalia,
Uganda
Contact: media1@unwatch.org
Tel: +41 22 734
1472
GENEVA, Nov. 12, 2012 -- Forty parliamentarians and human rights activists from 19 different countries ended their protest campaign today, in a failure to get the U.S. or the EU to even verbally oppose Venezuela's bid for a seat on the U.N.'s top rights body, and they circulated a resolution to condemn the Chavez government for gross violations.
"As Syria's Assad kills his own people, and a year after the U.N. finally removed Col. Qaddafi's regime from its Human Rights Council, the organization today is electing one of their loudest backers," said Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, the Geneva-based human rights group spearheading the protest. "It's absurd."
"Chavez is being elected in a Cuban-style ballot: there's no competition. This is the product of a pre-cooked political deal done behind closed doors."
"By choosing Chavez, the U.N. today grants legitimacy to a regime led by an autocrat who systematically harasses journalists, judges, human rights activists and student leaders, and a top supporter of the butchers of Syria and Iran."
Despite UN Watch's Miami Herald op-ed in May urging U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to live up to her pledge to keep bullies off the 47-nation body, and an internet petition by UN Watch appealing for action from EU foreign minister Catherine Ashton, Neuer said "we deeply regret that neither the US nor the EU took any action or made any statement to oppose Chavez. They could have persuaded another Latin American state to come forward, allowing Chavez to be defeated in a competitive vote as he was in 2006."
Venezeula instead ran uncontested. "Thanks to a backroom deal by the Latin American group," said Neuer, "we had a cooked-up slate of three candidates for three seats. An election with no competition is meaningless."
In its submission published on the U.N.
website, Venezuela claimed to be "a democratic and
social
State that respects rights and justice," whose citizens live
under "one of the most advanced constitutions in the world,"
enjoying "the full exercise of political freedoms," which
are "unprecedented in the history of the Republic."
"The Chavez bid was especially absurd," said Neuer, "in wake of the admission by a former top Venezuelan judge that verdicts in politically-sensitive cases are orchestrated by government officials."
"Despite the promise of reform, it is tragic that the U.N.'s top rights body routinely includes such serial violators as Cuba, China and Saudi Arabia. They and their allies enjoy impunity. When the prosecutor, judge and jury are the perpetrators themselves, justice becomes a joke," said Neuer.
"Because council term limits require China, Cuba and Russia to step off next year, the Venezuelan candidacy is a strategic move by the authoritarian bloc, designed to limit the ability of Western democracies to adopt measures for victims in Syria, Iran and other hotspots," said Neuer.
"The U.S. recently declared that it
would fight to keep abusers from joining UN bodies. By
Secretary Clinton and her EU counterparts failing to act,
the face of the U.N.'s highest human rights body will now be
that of Hugo Chavez."
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The
International Campaign Against the
Candidacy of Hugo
Chavez for
the U.N. Human Rights
Council
• ONLINE PETITION TO AMB. SUSAN
RICE
• About the Chavez Bid and How Governments Can
Stop It
• Joint Appeal by MPs, NGOs & Human Rights
Activists (click here for spanish)
• Venezuela's U.N. Filing & Campaign
Statements
• Documentation of Human Rights Violations in
Venezuela
• Video Testimony by Venezuelan Rights
Activists
Joint Appeal by MPs, NGOs
& Human Rights Activists
We,
the undersigned members of parliament, human rights
activists and non-governmental organizations, strongly
oppose the candidacy of Venezuela for the United Nations
Human Rights Council. Having regard to its poor record on
human rights protection at home, and its poor record in
human rights promotion at the UN, the government of
Venezuela fails to meet the minimum membership criteria
established by the UN General Assembly. Instead, we urge the
UN Human Rights Council to adopt this NGO-drafted Resolution
on Venezuelan abuses.
• Matteo Mecacci, Member of
Italian Parliament, Chairman of Committee on Democracy,
Human Rights and Humanitarian Questions of OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly
• Riccardo Migliori, Member of
the Italian Parliament, Vice President of the OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly
• Denis MacShane, Member of the
UK Parliament, former Minister for Europe
• Irwin
Cotler, Member of Canadian Parliament, Liberal Critic for
Human Rights, Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on International
Human Rights
• Michael Danby, Member of Australian
Parliament, Committee on Foreign Affairs
• Hillel
Neuer, United Nations Watch, Switzerland
• Dr. Yang
Jianli, Chinese dissident and former political prisoner,
Founder and President of Initiatives for China
•
Robert R. LaGamma, President, Council for a Community of
Democracies, USA
• Laurence Kwark, Secretary General,
Pax Romana, ICMICA/MIIC, Switzerland
• Javier El-Hage,
General Counsel, Human Rights Foundation
• Jacob
Mchangama, Center for Political Studies, Denmark
•
Anyakwee Nsirimovu, Insitute of Human Rights and
Humanitarian Law, Nigeria
• Ali AlAhmed, The Gulf
Institute, USA
• Nazanin Afshin-Jam, President and
Co-Founder, Stop Child Executions, Canada
• John J.
Suarez, International Secretary, Cuban Democratic
Directorate
• Nguyên Lê Nhân Quyên, Delegate,
Vietnamese League for Human Rights, Switzerland
• Dr.
Francois Ullmann, President, Ingenieurs du Monde,
Switzerland
• Fazal-ur Rehman Afridi, Institut de
recherche et d’études stratégiques de Khyber, France
• Hu Ping, Chinese dissident, editor of Beijing
Spring, former president of the Chinese Alliance for
Democracy
• Christina Fu, New Hope Foundation,
President
• Michael Craig, China Rights Network,
President
• Huang Hebian, The Alliance of the Guard of
Canadian Values
• Mamady Kaba, African Assembly for
the Defense of Human Rights (RADHHO), Guinea
• Ann J.
Buwalda, Esq., Executive Director, Jubilee Campaign USA
• Ali Egal, Fanole Human Rights & Development
Organization (FAHRO), Somalia/Kenya
• Jean Stoner,
Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, USA
• Amina Bouayach,
Morrocan Organisation For Human Rights, Morocco
•
Faisal Fulad, Gulf European Centre for Human Rights, UK
• Dickson Ntwiga, Executive Director, Solidarity House
International, Kenya
• Faisal Hassan, Bahrain Human
Rights Watch Society, Bahrain
• Elizabeth Vanardenne,
UN Rep, International Federation of Business & Professional
Women
• Yang Kuanxing, Chinese dissident, editor of
Yibao and original signatory to Charter ‘08, the manifesto
calling for political reform in China
• Yuri
Dzhibladze, Center for Development of Democracy & Human
Rights, Russia
• Huguette Chomski Magnis, Mouvement
Pour la Paix et Contre le Terrorisme, France
• Kabaale
G Timothy, African Centre for Treatment and Rehabilitation
of Torture Victims, Uganda
• Gibreil I. M. Hamid,
President, Darfur Peace and Development Centre, Switzerland
• Dr. Harris O. Schoenberg, President, UN Reform
Advocates, USA
• Galina Nechitailo, Vice-President,
Environmental Women’s Assembly
www.unwatch.org
UN Watch is a
Geneva-based human rights organization founded in 1993 to
monitor UN compliance with the principles of its Charter. It
is accredited as a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in
Special Consultative Status to the UN Economic and Social
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ENDS