UN Watch Condemns Election of Dictators to the UNHRC
UN Watch Condemns Election of Dictators to the UN Human Rights Council
"China, Cuba,
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq, Rwanda
elected
"Credibility of UN Rights
Council at stake," says UN Watch
* Major blow: Failure of
Russia to get elected
UN Watch's Hillel
Neuer, flanked by MPs, activists, families of political
prisoners, presents NGO report urging democracies to oppose
dictators. Canadian Parliament, Oct. 5,
2016. However, a
positive outcome of today's vote was Russia's failure to get
elected. Russia only got 112 votes, coming third behind
Hungary with 144 votes and Croatia with 114 votes. The East
European Group had three candidates for two positions.
The
result on Russia comes at the heels of a persistent UN Watch
campaign to oppose the election of dictators to the UN's top
human rights body. An op-ed by UN Watch Executive Director
Hillel Neuer opposing Russia's candidacy was published in
today's New York Daily News, ahead of the UN
vote. "The non-election of Russia shows that the nations
of the world can reject gross abusers if they so choose.
This makes the election of Saudi Arabia, China and Cuba even
more preposterous," said Neuer.
GENEVA, October 28, 2016 - A
Geneva-based nongovernmental human rights group condemned
the UN's election of dictatorships to the world's highest
human rights body, saying it was now dominated by a majority
of 53 percent which are non-democracies. (For compete vote
results, see here)
"The re-election of
China, Cuba and Saudi Arabia — regimes which
systematically violate the human rights of their citizens
— casts a shadow upon the reputation of the United
Nations," said UN Watch executive director Hillel
Neuer."
"The UN's election of Saudi Arabia as a
world judge on human rights is like a town picking a
pyromaniac to be the fire chief," said Neuer.
UN Watch
led the campaign this year with
a coalition of NGOs to oppose the re-election of Saudi
Arabia, Russia, China and Cuba, as well as the new election
bids of Egypt, Iraq and Rwanda, by lobbying governments, and
through online petitions, high profile parliamentary events, UN press conferences, university lectures, YouTube videos, and op-eds in the Washington Post and other
major newspapers.
UN Watch expressed
disappointment at the "deafening silence" from U.S.
Ambassador Samantha Power and her UK, French, German and
other EU allies, who "deferred to dictators by refusing to
speak out and campaign against them."
A 21-page joint NGO report
published by UN Watch, Human Rights Foundation and
the Raoul Wallenberg Center for Human Rights, and circulated
to UN diplomats, deemed China, Cuba, Russia, Saudi
Arabia, Egypt, Iraq and Rwanda, as "Not Qualified"
under the U.N.'s own membership criteria. The qualifications
of Guatemala, South Africa and Tunisia were
deemed "questionable" based on problematic human right
records or in their UN voting
records.
"Regrettably," said Neuer, "neither the
U.S. nor the EU said a word about hypocritical candidacies
that only undermine the credibility and effectiveness of the
UN human rights system. By turning a blind eye as human
rights violators join and subvert the council, leading
democracies are complicit in the world body's moral
decline."
"When the UN helps gross
abusers act as champions and global judges of human rights,
it's an insult to their political prisoners and their many
other victims -- and a defeat for the global cause of human
rights. When the U.N.'s highest human rights body becomes a
case of the foxes guarding the henhouse, the world's victims
suffer," said Neuer.
Click here for PDF of the full
report.