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Untitled Document
Indonesia is opposing United Nations Secretary General Kofi
Annan's proposal to abolish the UN Human Rights Commission and replace it with
a smaller Human Rights Council that would meet year-round and have its membership
restricted to countries that "abide by the highest human rights standards".
Indonesia's rejection was voiced the country's deputy permanent
representative to the UN, Adiyatwidi Adiwoso Asmady, during a meeting of UN
officials in New York on Monday (2/5/05).
"I think it is hard for the developing countries to support
such a proposal," he was quoted as saying by state news agency Antara.
He said that if the UN Human Rights Council is formed, its
performance is predicted to be less credible than that of the existing Human
Rights Commission.
The transfer of powers from the Human Rights Commission to
Human Rights Council would also raise a number of questions, he said.
"I think it is much better to improve and strengthen the
existing Human Rights Commission instead of eliminating it totally and forming
a new body that could not possibly function well," he added.
The Human Rights Commission was established in 1946 as a subsidiary
body of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). The commission presently has
53 member states and meets annually in Geneva for six weeks with a mandate to
establish and monitor international human rights standards.
There has been growing criticism of the commission over recent
years and mounting calls for it to be reformed. Critics complain the body is
bureaucratic, excessively political, and ineffectual. The commission has also
come under for allowing membership of states with appalling human rights records.
Indonesia presently holds the chairmanship of the commission.
In addition to rejecting the proposed Human Rights Council,
Indonesia has also been opposing Annan's formation of an independent commission
of experts to conduct an inquiry into serious human rights violations committed
in East Timor in 1999.
Source: Laksamana.net
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