UN Watch slams election of Congo & Kuwait
PRESS RELEASE
UN Watch slams election of Congo & Kuwait to UN rights council, hails defeat of Nicaragua
Urges new members India, Indonesia, Philippines
to improve stance on resolutions for victims
For Immediate Release
NEW YORK, May 20 -- UN Watch
slammed the UN's election today of Congo and Kuwait to the
Human Rights Council, but hailed the defeat of Nicaragua,
after a campaign with other rights groups that spotlighted
the poor records of all three countries. Click here for full report PDF --
Executive summary below.
"Congo, Kuwait and Nicaragua have poor records in respecting the basic human rights of their own citizens, and have consistently voted the wrong way on UN initiatives to promote and protect the human rights of others," said UN Watch executive director Hillel Neuer.
"With today's election, only 20 out of 47 of the new members rank as free democracies, while the rest -- a majority of 58% -- fail to meet basic democracy standards, rated as either not free or only partly free by Freedom House's annual survey," said Neuer.
"With members like Bahrain, China, Cuba and Saudi Arabia, joined today by Congo and Kuwait, the Human Rights Council is still a case of the foxes guarding the chickens," said Neuer.
"Still, Nicaragua's defeat is important. It's currently one of the most shameless defenders of Libya's Col. Moammar Qaddafi and Syrian President Bashar Assad. So two dictators who are killing their own people today lost a key ally. We're also delighted that Syria was pressured into pulling its bid last week," said Neuer, who led a campaign by UN Watch and 25 human rights groups (www.unwatch.org/stopsyria).
Kuwait's practice of torture and arbitrary arrest was condemned recently in a report submitted to the UN by the Kuwait Society for Human Rights. According to the US State Department, Kuwaiti security forces abuse prisoners. Authorities limit freedoms of speech, press, assembly, association, and religion, and limit freedom of movement for foreign workers and stateless Arab residents (called "Bidoon"). Women do not enjoy equal rights. Worker rights are limited, with expatriate workers subject to severe limitations of rights and discrimination.
UN Watch called on new members India,
Indonesia and the Philippines and Burkina Faso to improve
their voting records. All three last year refused to support
UN resolutions for human rights victims in Iran, Burma, and
North Korea.
Results of Today's UNGA Elections to the
UNHRC
191 ballots
188 present &
voting
AFRICA
Burkina Faso 182
Botsawa
177
Congo 176
Benin 174
DRC 3
South Africa
1
Egypt 1
ASIA
Indonesia 184
Philippine
183
India 181
Kuwait 166
Syria 5
EASTERN
GROUP
Czech 148
Romania 131
Georgia 89
LATIN
AMERICA (GRULAC)
Chile 159
Costa Rica 138
Peru
136
Nicaragua 98
WESTERN GROUP (WEOG)
Italy
180
Austria 177
Australia 2
########
UN WATCH EVALUATION OF CANDIDATES
FOR
2011-2014 MEMBERSHIP
ON THE UN HUMAN RIGHTS
COUNCIL
Click here for full report
PDF
As submitted to UNGA member states on May
17, 2011 and presented in a press briefing at United Nations
Headquarters, New York, May 19, 2011.
Executive
Summary
This report assesses each candidate country’s
record of domestic human rights protection and its UN voting
record, based on the criteria for UN Human Rights Council
membership established by UNGA Resolution 60/251 (2006). We
find that only 10 out of 17 candidate countries are
qualified. Three candidates have poor records and are not
qualified to be Council members. Four countries fall
somewhere in between, with qualifications that are
questionable.
Not Qualified: Congo, Kuwait,
Nicaragua
Questionable: Burkina Faso, India, Indonesia,
Philippines
Qualified: Austria, Benin, Botswana, Chile,
Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Georgia, Italy, Peru,
Romania
The absence of competition in three out of the
five regional lists calls into question the very premise and
rationale of the election. Nevertheless, UNGA member states
can—and should—refrain from casting their votes for
countries that are not qualified. Candidate countries with
questionable credentials should, at a minimum, be asked to
commit to redress the shortcomings—in their human rights
record and their UN voting records—as identified in this
report.
Click here for full report PDF
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 Council (ECOSOC) and as an Associate NGO to the UN Department of Public Information (DPI).