U.N. Chief Rebuked in Human Rights Council
U.N. Chief Rebuked in Human Rights Council
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was rebuked by Islamic states in the Human Rights Council today for having criticized its decision to institutionalize the censure of Israel, singled out under the council's new procedures as the only country permanently indicted by a standing agenda item.
"We're witnessing a dangerous
attempt to censor the highest official of the United
Nations, an effort to silence anyone who exposes the
council's repeated breaches of its own principles of
equality, universality, and non-selectivity," said Hillel
Neuer, executive director of U.N. Watch, a human rights
monitoring group based in Geneva.
In the council's
first meeting since Ban Ki-moon issued his June 20th appeal
for equal treatment of all situations, Pakistan, speaking on
behalf of the U.N.'s 57-strong Organization of the Islamic
Conference, told the council it would have to "streamline
its relationship" with the Secretary-General. The
representative of the Musharraf government reproached Mr.
Ban for his statement that, according to Pakistan,
criticized the "consensual adoption of our agenda" and was
guilty of "singling out the issue of Palestine." He said "we
should remove this anomaly through
dialogue."
Egypt, whose recent election to the
council drew sharp criticism from activists at home and
abroad, said that Mr. Ban's statement "is a very unfortunate
development and we would seek further clarification on that
statement and the appropriate means of the Council to verify
the authenticity of that statement and its
context."
In addition to its recent adoption of an
Islamic-sponsored agenda item that singles out Israel for
permanent scrutiny, the council, since being established in
June 2006, has directed all of its country censures, now
numbering eleven, against the Jewish state. The only other
country addressed has been Sudan, though instead of issuing
condemnations, the council has praised Khartoum's
"cooperation" and repeatedly called for further
reports.
"It is somewhat ironic," said Neuer, "for
the Arab and Islamic states to object that their measures
singling out Israel are themselves being 'singled out' for
unfair treatment by the
Secretary-General."
Canada's representative
defended Mr. Ban. "I'm concerned that colleagues raised
objections to the Secretary-General's remarks on the outcome
of the Council's fifth session," he said in a speech to the
council. "We have to acknowledge that the Secretary-General
is entitled to his views, and it would ill behoove this
council to appear to be constraining or discouraging the
exercise of freedom of opinion and expression, a fundamental
freedom we are committed to uphold."
Canada
vociferously objected in June when the " consensus" adoption
of the new reforms was achieved over Canada's clear
opposition, and by means of procedural irregularities
that included the non-submission of the package to a
promised up-and-down vote.
When the General Assembly voted on the March 2006 reform of the council, U.N. officials promised that the agenda item "targeting Israel" -- a notorious feature of the defunct Commission on Human Rights -- would be replaced by a "clean slate."
When that promise was broken, Mr. Ban issued his statement. In Geneva, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour has yet to issue any similar public declaration, though in recent letters to activist groups she acknowledged that "the specific, explicit itemization of one situation is selective."
"The U.N., and Geneva in particular, would do well to hear more, not less, independent voices of principle," said Neuer. "We trust that High Commissioner Arbour will follow Mr. Ban's example to speak truth to power, and begin to vigorously oppose measures that trample the credibilty of the council."
ENDS