Wednesday, March 09, 2005
HR Watch to UN: Condemn torture by US
U.N.
Rights Body Must Fight to Restore Credibility
Human
Rights Watch
To remain relevant, the United Nations top rights body must aggressively expose and respond to human rights abuses worldwide, Human Rights Watch said. The Commission on Human Rights itself has come under attack by the U.N.s High-level Panel on Threats, which noted its eroding credibility and professionalism.
The
Commission must focus on protecting human rights, instead of blocking
criticism of members that commit serious rights abuses, said
Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. The
Commission has become a refuge for governments like
Only by reclaiming its role of exposing governments that systematically abuse human rights, and establishing measures to redress those situations, can the Commission re-establish its relevance, Human Rights Watch said.
While the list of countries that should be subject to the Commissions scrutiny is long, Human Rights Watch has highlighted several urgent situations where the Commission has a particularly urgent responsibility to act. These recommendations should be viewed as test cases of the Commissions ability to continue to perform its most fundamental responsibilities.
Great
Lakes region of Africa: With the ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic
of Congo,
The
former Soviet Union: The Commission should adopt critical resolutions about
the situations in
The United States: Human Rights Watch called on the Commission to condemn disappearances, torture, and other mistreatment of detainees by the United States in the global war on terrorism and to ask that the United States grant access to terrorism suspects held by the United States around the world to the Commissions different monitoring mechanisms that have requested such access several months ago.
The adoption of critical resolutions on several of the worlds most severe human rights crises would signal the return to the Commissions most fundamental focus: the protection of human rights around the world. Another step toward restoring the Commissions credibility would be ridding its membership of the worst violators of human rights. Human Rights Watch called on member states of the United Nations to deny a seat on the Commission to countries with the worst human rights records and to insist that states seeking Commission membership make positive commitments to human rights.
The Commission has only one option to regain its stature and credibility, Roth said. It must do its job by exposing abusive governments and working resolutely for the protection of human rights.
- Adam