The Resolution creating the new human rights body was finally approved
and the Council will hold its inaugural meeting on 19 June 2006. Read more
for an insight into the debate at the United Nations General Assembly.
Statements
Speaking after the vote, JOHN R. BOLTON ( United States) said
that his country had been one of the strongest proponents for meaningful engagements
on human rights issues, since the United Nations creation. It had been in the
forefront of the promotion of human rights and democracy, both in its own country
and around the world. The United Nations was founded on the principle that nations
must cooperate with each other to alleviate human suffering. In the coming years,
it would be judged on whether it created a United Nations machinery that was
strong and capable of doing that effectively. That no longer characterized the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights. The Secretary-General had established
ambitious, but appropriate, goals for efforts to reform the Commission. It was
the Secretary-General who had framed the discussion, by saying that the Commission’s
capacity to perform its tasks had been increasingly undermined by its declining
credibility and professionalism, which had cast a shadow on the credibility
of the United Nations as a whole.
Recalling that the Secretary-General had made a number of proposals
to improve the body, he said he had appreciated those efforts, along with those
of the General Assembly President and others, to improve the Commission. Through
their leadership, some of the goals had been achieved with the text. But, on
too many issues, the current text was not sufficiently improved. In focusing
on membership of the body, the United States had been in excellent company,
as the Secretary-General had also targeted that as the fundamental problem with
the Commission. Too many countries sought membership to protect themselves against
criticism, or to criticize others. He strongly agreed with the Secretary-General,
and that had been his own pre-eminent criticism of the Human Rights Commission.
The Secretary-General had proposed that the new Council be elected by a two-thirds
majority. That would have made it harder for countries not committed to human
rights, to win seats on the new body. The United States had also proposed exclusive
criteria to keep gross human rights abusers off the Council, to exclude the
worst violators.
Sadly, those suggestions had not been included in the next
text, he said. The resolution merely required Member States to “take into
account” a country’s human rights record, when voting. And, suspension
of a member required a two-thirds vote, a standard higher than that required
when electing new members. His standard was one of principle. He extended his
appreciation to those Member States that agreed with his assertion that there
should be no place on the new Council for human rights abusers, or for countries
where sanctions have been applied for human rights violations. The United States
believed “we can, and should, do more. We had an historic opportunity
to create a primary human right organ in the United Nations, poised to help
those most in need.” The Human Rights Council would be the United Nations
fundamental legacy. It should not ever be said that the United Nations Member
States were willing to “settle for good enough, for a compromise, for
merely the best we could do”, rather than for the one thing that ensured
that they were doing all they could to promote human rights.
Absent assurance of a credible membership, he had insufficient
confidence in the text; he could not say that the new body would be better than
its predecessor. That said, the United States would do everything possible to
make the Human Rights Council as strong as it could be, for it remained committed
to support the United Nations historical mission to promote and protect the
human rights of all the world’s citizens. The real test would be the quality
of membership that emerged on the Council and whether that included “
Cuba, the Sudan, Zimbabwe, Iran, Belarus and Burma”.
ENRIQUE BERRUGA FILLOY ( Mexico) said that the establishment
of the Human Rights Council was the most importance advance of the multilateral
work in favour of human rights in recent decades. Through that decision, human
rights were consolidated as one of the three pillars of collective action of
the contemporary international community. The dwindling efficiency and credibility
of the Human Rights Commission had made strengthening the United Nations human
rights machinery an urgent matter. For that reason, the main challenge of reform
was to ensure that the new Council was substantially better than the Commission,
and that objective had been achieved. The negotiating process, which ended today,
provided a clear picture of the multiple existing views surrounding that complex
issue. The resolution did not reflect an ideal world, but the real one.
Indeed, he said, there was a prevailing divide between those
who perceived human rights as a way of promoting dignity and fundamental freedoms,
and those who saw them as an uneasy obligation or as one that was difficult
to implement, because of certain customs, ideological postures or ways to exercise
power. The international community’s next challenge, therefore, was to
narrow that gap, to reach universality and effective promotion of human rights.
The new Council must end those habits and flaws that had become common practice
in the Commission, particularly the double standards, selectivity and lack of
real impact in its decisions in the field. The new organ could make significant
progress in the following areas: placing the human rights agenda at a higher
institutional level in the United Nations; and electing its members on the basis
of their merits and linking their election to their promotion and protection
of human rights.
In addition, the new Council would guide its work according
to international human rights standards, he continued. The General Assembly
would have the ability to suspend a Council member that committed gross and
systematic human rights violations. The universal periodical review mechanism
would both raise the bar to wider scrutiny of human rights situations and provide
greater cooperation with countries that might need it. For those reasons, Mexico
supported the creation of the new body and welcomed that crucial step. His country
sought to preserve the highest international standards for the defence of human
dignity. The task ahead was to ensure that the Council was up to the important
role granted to the United Nations, and it was the world community’s collective
responsibility to consolidate the Council as the centrepiece of that endeavour.
GERHARD PFANZELTER (Austria), on behalf of the European Union,
welcoming the adoption of the resolution, regretted that not all had been able
to support the text, and hoped that all delegations would be able work together
in the future to make the Council an institution that was genuinely able to
advance the cause of human rights. The establishment of the Human Rights Council
marked an important step in the implementation of commitments made by Heads
of State and Government at the 2005 Summit. He hoped today’s decision
would give a new dynamic to the continuing reform process of the United Nations
and contribute to strengthening its credibility and legitimacy. From the outset,
the Union had aimed for a Council that would be equipped with the status, mandate,
structures and membership necessary to give human rights the central role foreseen
by the United Nations Charter. While not everything the Union had aimed for
was reflected in the resolution, it represented an improvement over the Commission
on Human Rights, and would further strengthen the United Nations human rights
machinery. The strengthening of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights had been a first important step, in that regard.
He said the resolution contained several elements that would
help to improve the credibility and effectiveness of the United Nations human
rights system. The Union had argued for the Human Rights Council to be a standing
body. Together with additional time for the universal review, the United Nations
would be able to devote more time to human rights than ever before. The Council’s
composition and the quality of its membership would clearly impact the functioning
of the Council and the credibility of its work. While the membership was open
to all Member States, it was also their responsibility to fulfil the mandate
of promoting and protecting human rights. The Union took that responsibility
very seriously. Each European Union member State committed itself not to cast
its vote for a candidate that was under Security Council sanctions for human
rights related reasons. No State guilty of gross and systematic human rights
violations should serve on the Council. He welcomed, therefore, the possibility
for the General Assembly to suspend, by a two-thirds majority of members present
and voting, the rights of Council membership for a member that committed gross
and systematic violations of human rights.
He welcomed the new provisions for a direct, individual election
by secret ballot by the absolute majority of the General Assembly. Although
the Union would have preferred a requirement of a two-thirds majority, that
was an improvement to the Commission on Human Rights. Other quality elements
for membership in the Council were also important for the Union, and all Council
members would have to fully cooperate with the Council. The Union also recognized
the enhanced status of the Council as a subsidiary body of the General Assembly.
The review of the status within the next five years would offer the opportunity
to assess the Council’s work, and whether it should be elevated to a principal
organ of the United Nations. Clearly, “within five years” entailed
the possibility to do so, as early as Member States decided.
The Council’s mandate provided for a solid basis for
the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all,
he said. It would provide guidance and assistance to all countries to achieve
the highest standards of human rights protection, through dialogue, cooperation
and capacity-building. The Council would also address situations of violations
of human rights, including gross and systematic violations, and make recommendations
thereon. The Union would make every effort to ensure that the Council would
be able to fulfil its mandate responsibly. The Union also placed importance
on the Council’s mandate to promote effective coordination and mainstreaming
of human rights within the United Nations system. All States had the primary
responsibility to promote and protect human rights. The universal periodic review
was a novelty that would submit all to scrutiny, without exception. It was essential
that the review had the possibility of further follow-up, as appropriate. The
Union had always argued for maintaining and building on the strengths of the
Commission on Human Rights. The participation of non-governmental organizations
would be an important element in the Council’s deliberations and would
have a positive impact on its functioning.
An important decision had been taken today, and the groundwork
had been laid for a fresh start, he concluded. The Human Rights Council inherited
a solid foundation of human rights instruments. The task would be to translate
those norms in to tangible improvements of the human rights situation on the
ground. If that could not be achieved, the Council would not be the relevant
body the international community wanted it to be. The members’ common
wish for enhanced dialogue would also lead to greater understanding and tolerance
among civilizations, cultures and religions. It was up to Member States to live
up to those expectations.
PETER MAURER ( Switzerland) said the resolution was a “good
compromise” and a fair balance between the different perspectives and
ambitions that had been expressed during negotiations. At the same time, it
evinced a new commitment by Member States to promote universal human rights.
He added that his delegation was aware that, for a large part of the United
Nations membership, the draft’s recognition of the right to development
was very important. Further, the text strengthened the Organization’s
human rights machinery through, among other ways, a more sustained engagement
throughout the year and the establishment of a universal review mechanism.
He went on to say that the resolution created an institution
with greater legitimacy, in that members would not only be more carefully selected,
but they must also cooperate with the Council and undertake voluntary commitments.
The resolution created a framework for a “fresh start” and for exploring
new forms of engagement. It also provided an opportunity to build trust, by
addressing human rights in a spirit of fairness, equal treatment and avoidance
of double standards, and “it is our sincere hope that we will not fall
back into old patterns of behaviour”, he said.
Clearly, not all the memberships’ concerns had been addressed
by the text, but “a reasonable level of progress has been achieved”.
“We do not share the intransigent and maximalist approaches of certain
delegations, who want to make us believe that they are the only ones fighting
for an ambitious human rights machinery. All too often, high ambitions are cover-ups
for less noble aims and oriented, not at improving the United Nations, but at
belittling and weakening it.” He stressed that the adoption of the resolution
was an important strategic achievement for the overall United Nations reform
process. “Indeed, change is a process, not an event.”
JOHAN LØVALD ( Norway) regretted that the historic resolution
could not be adopted without a vote. Human rights were universal rights. In
order for the new Council to be truly effective in the protection and promotion
of human rights, the support and strong engagement of all Member States was
needed. While the text was weaker in certain parts than he would have hoped
for, he recognized that many other countries could claim the same. The text
was a result of a compromise and could not be an ideal blueprint for anyone.
The establishment of the Human Rights Council presented, however, a unique opportunity
to start putting in place a reinvigorated system for the promotion and protection
of human rights and fundamental freedoms around the world. The new Council represented
an important step towards strengthening the United Nations human rights machinery.
The text set standards for new member countries, which would
be asked to make explicit commitments to promote and protect human rights, he
said. While the Council’s membership was open to all States, it was the
responsibility of Member States to elect candidates that were qualified to fulfil
the mandate of promoting and protecting human rights. From the beginning, Norway
had supported the elevation of human rights throughout the United Nations system,
and the upgrading of the Commission of Human Rights to a standing Human Rights
Council. That would reflect, at the institutional level, the centrality of human
rights in the United Nations system. The text adopted would establish a Council
with a clear mandate to address all human rights situations, a more frequent
meeting schedule and a new universal review mechanism. The text also preserved
key strengths of the Commission, including its unique system of special procedures
and non-governmental organization participation.
The international community’s political will and commitment
would be as important to making the new Council a better tool for meaningful
promotion and protection of human rights, as any changes in structure and working
methods, he said. The real test would be implementing human rights standards.
Before being able to deal with substantial issues, the first tasks would include
adopting a new agenda and working methods. To avoid a potential protection gap,
it was crucial to arrive at smooth transition arrangements from the Human Rights
Commission to the new Council.
HERALDO MUÑOZ ( Chile) said that the protection of human
beings lay at the heart of Chile’s interest in the Human Rights Council.
Human rights abuses should not occur in any parts of the world, but when they
did occur, the international community should be able to act, in a swift and
timely fashion. Chile had taken part in all phases of the negotiations resulting
in the text adopted today, with a view to reforming and strengthening the United
Nations human rights machinery for the protection and promotion of human rights
for all. Tomorrow, the Governments of some of the Member States that had resisted
the creation of the Human Rights Council could be overthrown, in a reversal
of circumstances, and those in power today, could become the dissidents of tomorrow.
The latter group would benefit from a strong, non-discriminatory Council that
safeguarded the human rights of all.
He said that, in supporting the draft, Chile was not taking
a stand against any particular country, nor did it accept the “use”
of human rights as an issue for any purpose. Chile was not aligned with anyone
or anything here, but the cause of the promotion of human rights. It had undergone
its own grim period of dictatorship, and was today a democracy, with a woman
at the helm who was acquainted with torture and exile. Chileans themselves felt
solidarity with people who had suffered gross and systematic human rights violations.
His delegation would have favoured more clear-cut compliance with the highest
human rights standards, when it came to the selection of Council members, and
regional distribution could have been more in line with the Latin American and
Caribbean Group’s representation in the Human Rights Commission. It would
also have preferred a more solid reference to civil society. All the same, the
text was balanced and positive, and represented a tremendous advance. It was
now incumbent on the Council and Member States to live up to the highest expectations,
and build on those positive elements to restore the protection of human rights
to the centre of the United Nations concerns.
ABDULLAH ALSAIDI ( Yemen), speaking on behalf of the Organization
of the Islamic Conference (OIC), said that his delegation was “far from
being happy with the draft” that had been adopted today by the Assembly.
The Conference would have wanted it to contain unambiguous and unequivocal reference
to acts of incitement, hatred and religious intolerance. “We live in a
world, after all, that is seemingly rife with tensions between cultures.”
That was why the OIC would urge President Eliasson to lead
the Assembly action and discussions on matters pertaining to the dialogue among
cultures and civilizations. Still, the OIC opted not to take steps that would
lead to the text “unravelling”. It hoped that the international
community would recognize that acts of incitement, bigotry, hatred and religious
intolerance, even when promoted as “freedom of speech”, would be
recognized and disdained.
VANU GOPALA MENON ( Singapore) said the Assembly had been at
it for months, and the fatigue in the room was palpable. Delegations had fought
for their positions. There had been sharp disagreements, which sometimes seemed
pointed enough to derail the process. It had certainly been the deft and patient
leadership of the co-Chairs that had kept the process on track. He did not mean
to suggest that the text was poor. It was balanced and realistic, and met the
critical concerns of developing and developed countries. The text also established
a Human Rights Council that was superior to what the United Nations had. Council
members would be required to amass a significant threshold of support in a direct
and secret election. Term limits would also give all members the opportunity
to serve, and the Council would be more representative. In short, the Council
would have legitimacy in membership and decisions.
While the text would not make everyone happy, that was a good
thing, for if every delegation had gotten what it wanted, that would be capitulation,
not negotiation. He called for trust in the process that had been devised, to
ensure fairness and efficacy, and in the ability of Member States to make sound
decisions. It was also important to trust that members would have the courage
to deal with the body constructively and through a prism that was broader than
just national interests. The Council would not be judged on its structure; it
would be judged by its results in promoting and protecting human rights. That
was where the role of Member States was crucial. It was important that members
made utmost efforts to avoid the mistakes of the past, mistakes that had discredited
the Commission on Human Rights. Members should also be prepared to regularly
review the Council’s working methods and functioning to make it more effective
in the promotion and protection of human rights. In short, it was important
to ensure that the Council was a living entity, one that was fine tuned and
overhauled occasionally. Members should focus energy on making the Council work,
as it would be judged by history.
LE LUONG MINH ( Viet Nam) said he hoped that the Human Rights
Council was less likely than its predecessor to become politicized when dealing
with issues of membership and expansion. He recognized that the Member States
might have agreed to a different Human Rights Council. Given the divergence
of views on how the new body should unfold, he considered the text adopted today
to be a balanced compromised draft. He highly valued the efforts of the General
Assembly President. Viet Nam’s support for the resolution had flowed from
its consistent policy of striving, together with the international community,
to strengthen the promotion and protection of human rights for all people of
the world, based on respect for national independence, sovereignty and the territorial
integrity of all countries. Hopefully, the text would be implemented in a balanced
and fair manner, leading to implementation of a Council free from politicization.
SABELO SIVUYILE MAQUNGO (South Africa), speaking on behalf
of the African Group, welcomed the adoption of the resolution, which was of
great importance, not only to the African continent, but to all peoples of the
world. It reaffirmed basic human rights and fundamental freedoms and placed
an equal emphasis on political rights. He noted with satisfaction that the important
elements of cooperation and dialogue had been incorporated into the text, and
that it recognized the importance of eliminating double standards, selectivity
and politicisation. The text was the product of long negotiations and was more
progressive than previous texts. There were some principles, however, that the
Group held dear, that had not been included in the text. Those principles provided
clear parameters to establish a strong, effective and non-politicised Human
Rights Council.
Regarding meetings of the Council, he hoped that efforts would
be made to ensure that assistance was extended to least developed countries
and developing countries, to ensure their participation. On the Council’s
membership, he would have hoped for a larger number than the one adopted, to
provide the opportunity for more States to participate. On development, he would
have wished for a stronger development agenda to be articulated. However, the
resolution was a sum greater than its parts.
While the text did not fully meet all the Group’s concerns,
if the provisions of the text were fully implemented by all countries and in
good faith, then it would strengthen the promotion and protection of human rights
internationally. He expected that, in the review conference to take place in
five years, there would be opportunity to take into account the African Group’s
position. The Group would fully cooperate with the Council to ensure the promotion
and protection of all human rights and fundamental freedoms. It was committed
to enhancing and improving the work of the newly established Human Rights Council.
OMAR BASHIR MOHAMED MANIS ( Sudan) said the United Nations
reform process, including the creation of the Human Rights Council, was aimed
at assessing the work of the Organization system-wide, and revitalize the 60-year-old
world body, so that it could better reflect the modern day international scene.
The Sudan hoped that the new Council would be based on international cooperation
and would provide a framework to deal with all human rights issues, without
selectivity or politicization. He hoped it would respect cultural and political
differences, as well as the right to development, so that people in developing
countries could achieve sustainable socio-economic development.
The Sudan would work to see that the new Council could address
the situations that the current Commission on Human Rights could not resolve.
Indeed, that body had been turned into a “forum for confrontation”,
hamstrung by politicization and selectivity. The Commission had ignored the
flagrant human rights violations perpetrated by the major powers, but it readily
considered and adopted resolutions condemning human rights situations in smaller
countries.
The aim of the new Council must be to build on the advantages
of the Commission and avoid that body’s shortcomings. He stressed that
the current resolution did not contain all the elements that his delegation
would have wanted, and it, indeed, included what appeared a few holdovers from
the previous Commission, which would make it easier for major powers to condemn
small countries, while giving “notes of appreciation” to their allies.
The Sudan would reject such efforts to politicize the Council, as well as moves
to turn it into some sort of subsidiary body of the Security Council. That was
to be avoided at all costs, as it would be in contravention of the will of the
majority of Member States, and undermine the powers of the General Assembly.
And, while he did not wish to reply to the statement made earlier
by the United States, he would remind the Assembly that that delegation had
previously tried to convince the world that its detention centres at Guantanamo
Bay and Abu Ghraib were “five star tourist resorts”. Indeed, the
Sudan did not need any lessons on human rights from the United States. The Sudan’s
message would be that cooperation and dialogue were the best means to deal with
human rights in a fair and objective manner.
ALBERTO D’ALOTTO ( Argentina) said the text was missing
some elements that would have bestowed upon the Human Rights Council, the same
status as that of the Security Council and the Economic and Social Council.
The evolution of the negotiations, however, had led him to approve the text,
apart from the fact that the Council would not be a main body of the United
Nations, and that it had not been possible to require a two-third vote for membership
selection. Nevertheless, he agreed with the Council’s selection as a replacement
for the Human Rights Commission. The latter had recorded some major achievements,
but it had fallen short, as well.
The Human Rights Council should become robust enough to avoid
the recurrence of similar episodes to those atrocities that had occurred in
his country some 30 years ago, he said. Argentina would strive to make the new
body an open forum for the victims of acts of repression, open to all who felt
they had been denied their human rights. He congratulated the Assembly President
for the work he had done to achieve the milestone reached today.
CHRISTIAN WENAWESER ( Liechtenstein) said that the Assembly
had just witnessed a “historic moment” in United Nations reform.
The establishment of the Council fulfilled one of the major promises made at
the 2005 World Summit, and his delegation was pleased to be a part of the vast
majority of States, which considered the Council a new and clear commitment
of the international community to enhance the promotion and protection of human
rights. The text adopted today marked a significant improvement over the current
Commission on Human Rights, even though Liechtenstein shared the dissatisfaction
of others with some parts of it.
His delegation would have preferred, for instance, a convening
mechanism that was more flexible, to allow for case-specific dialogue with special
procedures, treaty bodies and the High Commissioner for Human Rights. It would
also have preferred a clear division of work between the Council and the Assembly’s
Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian, Cultural), but he understood that that
was a concern that could be accommodated when the Council was set up in Geneva,
with a view to avoiding duplication of work.
Among the key components of the decision taken today, was that,
for the first time in the history of the Organization, the Assembly had decided
that no State could have a de facto permanent membership in the new Council.
That was a genuine reflection of the universality of human rights, and a very
important precedent for the future. The public debate over the past few weeks
had focused strongly on the question of eligibility for membership. And, while
that focus had distorted the overall picture, it was, nevertheless, a real concern.
Indeed, membership in the new Council was more important than ever before, because
it would be made up of fewer members than the existing Commission.
Liechtenstein would cast its vote for the first group of members,
for those States that had a proven track record in the promotion and protection
of human rights, both domestically and in their United Nations activities. In
that respect, his delegation would give particular emphasis to issues, such
as standing invitations extended to special procedures, full cooperation with
them and other mechanisms established by the Commission, as well as ratification
of core human rights instruments, and the quality of reporting to the treaty
bodies which had been established by them.
Liechtenstein did not believe that a State that engaged in
domestic violations of universally recognized human rights, due to unwillingness,
rather than inability, could be expected to make an effective contribution to
the global promotion and protection of human rights worldwide “that we
are looking for”, he said. He also agreed that States that were under
enforcement measures imposed by the Security Council for their human rights
records should not serve on the new Council, for as long as those measures were
in place.
MILAD ATIEH ( Syria) said reform of the United Nations should
be aimed at making the world body better able to address the challenges of the
current century. Syria had voted in favour of the draft today, because of its
firm belief in the leadership role the United Nations played in protecting and
promoting all human rights, including the right to development. Syria had been
flexible during the negotiations, and had hoped that other delegations would
have been equally flexible.
And, while the text adopted had addressed some of Syria’s
concerns, his delegation would stress, among other things, that the newly established
Council should avoid selectivity and politicization; its work should be transparent;
it must adhere to the principles of territorial sovereignty and integrity; and
it must promote dialogue among civilization and religious tolerance. He added
that, since the new Council would replace the Commission on Human Rights, the
Commission’s agenda, particularly item 8 on “illegal Israeli practices
in the Arab territories” should be transferred to the new body. Syria
would work to ensure that the work of the Human Rights Council would be effective
and credible, and not serve narrow political or national interests.
KENZO OSHIMA ( Japan) welcomed the establishment of the Human
Rights Council. To create a truly effective human rights body, Japan had proposed
that the new Council should be a principle organ, with its members elected by
a two-thirds majority. His delegation regretted that those elements had not
been reflected in the final text. While the text was not perfect, it provided
a good and viable basis to strengthen the United Nations human rights machinery,
one that was a clear improvement over its predecessor. On that basis, Japan
had voted in favour of the resolution.
Member States now faced a new task to ensure that the newly
established Human Rights Council would be an effective and credible body, he
said. To that end, the preparatory work to put the Council into operation was
vitally important, and his delegation would appeal to all Member States to participate
actively in that work. During the course of preparation, Japan expected that
practices and mechanisms could be established, in order to enhance the credibility
of the Council’s membership, including, for example, the submission of
a written pledge by candidates seeking membership, well in advance of the election,
so that Member States could examine it, and fully take it into account in casting
their votes. Japan would vigorously try to explore the possibilities to enhance
the Council’s credibility, as its rules of procedures were discussed.
He also hoped that the review of the Council’s status within five years
would commence at an early opportunity.
He noted that, in future elections, Japan would give full consideration
to the human rights situation of each candidate. Japan would cast its vote for
those candidates who were committed to, and striving for, the protection and
promotion of human rights. Japan would not vote for candidates that it believed
were committing grave human rights violations, including those under sanctions
of the Security Council for human rights related reasons. He hoped today was
a day of triumph in the history of the promotion of world human rights.
ANDREY DENISOV ( Russian Federation) said he had voted in favour
of the draft, because, although far from perfect, the text was the outcome of
an extremely difficult search for a compromise. The new body would eliminate
double standards, selectivity and the politicization of human rights. It was
a starting point for future activities in the human rights field. Rule 100 of
annex 2 of the General Assembly’s rules of procedure stated that new organs
should be set up only after mature consideration. Already, on many occasions,
attention had been drawn to the ambiguous nature of many provisions in the text,
especially to operative paragraph 7, which discussed limiting membership to
two consecutive terms. That contradicted the principle set out in the United
Nations Charter on universal membership, which indicated that all States could
submit candidacies for membership to any United Nations body. The situation
was also not totally clear, with regard to whether or not membership in the
new body was open to all; it seemed to be bound by certain criteria. Hopefully,
the Human Rights Council itself would rectify the text’s ambiguous provisions.
MAGED A. ABDELAZIZ ( Egypt) said his vote in favour of the
draft was a clear reaffirmation of his country’s firm conviction of the
need for a new, vibrant subsidiary body of the Assembly, to deal successively
and progressively with human rights issues, based on cooperation and dialogue.
The new body’s institutional link to the Assembly should not be jeopardized.
As a subsidiary body of the Assembly, it should present all its recommendations
and resolutions to the Assembly for consideration, in accordance with the rules
of procedure applicable to the Assembly. The new body should also uphold the
basic principles, such as the sovereign equality of States, respect for their
territorial integrity and the right to self-determination of peoples under colonial
determination and foreign occupation. The Council should work diligently to
promote the respect and application of those principles. The new Council should
also safeguard the obligations to respect the cultural, religious and social
backgrounds of peoples.
He said that the suspension of the rights of membership, as
stipulated in the text’s operative paragraph 8, even though that was derived
from the United Nations Charter, should be an exceptional application of the
new body, only, and limited to, cases of gross and systematic human rights violations.
Such a case, however, should not be a precedent or basis for the “proliferation”
of such a practice in other United Nations bodies. In addition, his understanding
of preambular paragraph 7, which affirmed the need to broaden understanding
among civilizations, cultures and religions, was that it entailed the responsibility
of States and international organizations to ensure full respect for religions
and prophets. He stressed the responsibility of the new Council and the Assembly
to ensure that all States abided by their responsibilities, in that regard.
DAN GILLERMAN ( Israel) noted that, half a century after the
establishment of the Commission Human Rights, the Secretary-General had courageously
initiated a painful, yet necessary, process to substantively reform the United
Nations system and address the existing failings in the Commission. Born out
of the ruins and ashes of the Second World War, the United Nations, with the
Commission on Human Rights at its forefront, was intended to serve as a beacon
of resolve and hope, to restore humanity to mankind, and safeguard the promise
of “never again”. The Jewish people had a fundamental interest in
the United Nations promise of protection of human rights and freedoms. Among
its founding fathers and keenest advocates in 1946, before the establishment
of the State of Israel, were prominent Jewish leaders and Nobel Prize winners,
such as Rene Cassin, who had helped build an edifice of values and morals. The
United Nations vision had been the vision of the Jewish people.
He said it was with profound regret that Israel had witnessed
the corruption of those ideals in the United Nations central human rights agency,
the Commission on Human Rights, over many decades. Instead of equality, it had
gotten discrimination, instead of tolerance, it had experienced racism and exclusion,
and instead of human dignity, the Jewish people had suffered the indignity of
double standards, applied only to the Jewish State. Israel had been closely
involved in the negotiations, in order to create a viable, professional and
responsible Human Rights Council, which would renew public confidence in the
United Nations human rights machinery.
Unfortunately, the resolution fell significantly short of the
objectives that would enable the Council to live up to those ideals, he said.
The resolution contained worrying omissions, including the absence of sufficient
benchmarks for membership, which posed the danger that the new Council would
not be a significant improvement over its predecessor. The General Assembly
should not allow those responsible for the failure of the Commission on Human
Rights to lead the Council down the same road. Indeed, radical failure called
for radical change. That change, unfortunately, was not evident today. Israel,
along with others, had hoped to avoid voting on the resolution. At the current
juncture, however, the resolution failed to address several fundamental issues
of concern, and Israel had been compelled to vote against it.
REZLAN ISHAR JENIE ( Indonesia) noted that, while the text
did not fully meet his delegation’s expectations, the resolution in its
entirety should provide a basis for a better human rights machinery, than that
being replaced. The resolution was the fruit of collective efforts, and each
Member State was responsible for making it a success. Each and every Member
State, big or small, rich or poor, developed or developing, had the same right
to benefit from the human rights body when it started operating, as no country
was perfect in its performance in the field of human rights.
He said the Council should be faithful to the principles Member
States had agreed upon, namely the universality, objectivity, and non-selectivity
in the consideration of human rights issues, by treating all human rights, including
the right to development, in a fair and equal manner, as well as the elimination
of the double standards of politicization. With the absence of explicit reference
in the Council’s mandate to address country-specific situations, those
principles should also be fully applicable in that regard, and should be reflected
in its method of work and rules of procedure. With regard to the hierarchical
position of the Council within the United Nations system, as a subsidiary body
of the Assembly, the Council would submit recommendations on issues, within
the scope of its mandate, to the Assembly, and to other United Nations bodies,
only through its parent body.
Regarding the recent publications and republications of blasphemous
cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed, in various newspapers, he said it was
his delegation’s understanding that one of the Council’s tasks would
be to undertake measures to prevent the recurrence of that unfortunate incident,
and to devise a strategy to better promote understanding and respect for various
religions and cultural values of all States and societies.
YOUCEF YOUSFI ( Algeria) said the text was balanced, in that
it contained elements that allowed the international community to progressively
achieve the objective of protecting and promoting human rights, based on an
approach of dialogue and cooperation. His delegation would have liked to see
a number of elements in the resolution, however, particularly specific reference
to the right to self-determination of people under foreign occupation or colonial
rule. Algeria’s support for multilateralism had led it to agree to certain
compromises. Indeed, his country had strongly adhered to the principle of compromise
during the negotiation process. Algeria was willing to work with all Member
States to achieve the noble goals set out in the resolution.
ABDESSELEM ARIFI ( Morocco) said his delegation had voted in
favour of the compromise draft, which had established a fragile balance between
the divergent views of Member States. The text had been the result of the joint
efforts of all States to affect the will of world leaders, at the September
Summit, to strengthen the United Nations human rights machinery. Morocco would
affirm its position that the new Council should correct and remedy past actions
of the Commission on Human Rights.
WESTMORELAND PALON ( Malaysia) said his delegation agreed with
those that felt that the new Council should strive to ensure respect for cultural
diversity, promote dialogue among civilizations, and condemn religious intolerance.
It also accepted the fact that the text did not contain all the elements that
it would have wanted. But, at the same time, the resolution struck a delicate
balance that would elevate the level of the United Nations work in the field
of human rights. He applauded the Panamanian and South African Ambassadors,
who had led the negotiations, as well as General Assembly President Eliasson,
who had presented the final text.
HJALMAR W. HANNESSON ( Iceland) said the establishment of the
Human Rights Council marked the fulfilment of one of the major tasks mandated
to the Assembly at the 2005 Summit. As a result of long and difficult negotiations,
it was inevitable that compromises had had to be made. Indeed, he was disappointed
that the final outcome did not match the ambitions, in the clear and principled
approach proposed by the Secretary-General in his original report. Iceland supported
the resolution, because the alternatives of falling back on the Commission was
unacceptable, and not in the interests of human rights.
He said the Council’s status as a subsidiary body of
the of the General Assembly was a step forward, and he looked forward to the
review within the next five years, with a view to elevating the Council to the
status of a principal organ of the United Nations. More frequent meetings would
better equip the Council to address urgent human rights issues. The resolution
also preserved key strengths of the Commission, including its unique system
of independent experts, known as special procedures, as well as the important
arrangements and practices for non-governmental organization participation in
its work. The Council’s composition and the quality of its membership
would have an impact on the Council’s functioning and the credibility
of its work. Iceland would not vote for any candidate country that was under
sanctions imposed by the Security Council for human rights related reasons,
or any country that was considered to be committing gross and systematic human
rights violations.
PAIMANEH HASTEH ( Iran) said she would have preferred to have
adopted the resolution by consensus. Since a single delegation -- the United
States -- chose to ask for a recorded vote, against the will of the great majority
of members of the Organization -- everyone faced a less than desirable situation.
In that situation, her delegation had decided to abstain on the resolution,
owing to its concerns and reservations about a number of provisions contained
in the resolution. Iran attached great importance to international efforts to
enhance dialogue and broaden understanding among civilizations, as well as to
ensure objectivity and non-selectivity in the consideration of human rights,
and the elimination of double standards and politicization in the work of the
new Council, as rightly and unambiguously recognized in the text. The Council
was bound to observe those criteria in its future work, in order to remedy the
Commission’s shortcomings. And, as a subsidiary body of the General Assembly,
the Council should submit its reports, recommendations and decisions on the
promotion and protection of human rights, solely to the General Assembly.
She said that country-specific resolutions should not be approved,
without exhausting all means of cooperation, and ensuring avoidance of politicization
and double standards. Membership should be open to all United Nations Member
States, and Council members should be elected directly and individually by the
majority of the General Assembly members, and on the basis of geographical distribution.
She was concerned that the suspension of the rights of membership in the Council,
even by a two-thirds majority of Council members, might be used as a pretext
by certain States, in their politically motivated attempts to pursue their national
interests. The term specified in the resolution, namely “gross and systematic
violations of human rights”, therefore, should be given a clear and undisputed
interpretation.
She would have preferred that the frequency and duration of
the Council’s meetings were more clearly spelled out and better elaborated
in the text. The issue should be properly addressed by the Assembly, to avoid
conflicting interpretation, and possible confusion, in the future.
It was unfortunate that, despite the practices of blasphemy
and insulting prophets and religions, the proposals put forward by the Organization
of the Islamic Conference had not been duly taken into consideration, she said.
What had been reflected in the text was important, but in no way met the concerns
of the Muslim countries. She, nevertheless, earnestly hoped that the new Council
would successfully promote and protect human rights worldwide.
MARGARET HUGHES FERRARI ( Saint Vincent and the Grenadines),
speaking on behalf of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) said that it was regrettable
that the text under consideration today had not been approved by consensus.
Throughout the negotiations, her delegation had worked to ensure the creation
of a body that was inclusive and open to the participation of all States, towards
the effective promotion and protection of human rights. And, while some of CARICOM’s
proposals had not found their way into the text, in the interest of flexibility
and compromise, it had supported the document. That said, the CARICOM hoped
that the new Council’s work would not be politicized, and that it would
seek to address all human rights from a fair and objective standpoint.
JUDITH MBULA BAHEMUKA ( Kenya) said that, while every Member
State would have preferred to “take home the whole cake” today,
everyone knew that, in a household with 191 members, that was neither practical
nor feasible. Kenya was, therefore, happy that, in the spirit of accommodation
and understanding, everyone had “gotten a piece of this cake”. The
text adopted by the Assembly was, indeed, “workable”, and a big
step towards creating an institution that would be stronger and more effective
in promoting and protecting human rights. It also represented a very significant
improvement over the Commission on Human Rights, and would reinvigorate the
United Nations human rights machinery. It was unfortunate that the text could
not have been adopted by consensus.
She called today a “defining moment” for the Organization’s
struggle to advance human rights. It marked the beginning of the transition
from the Commission to the Council. Over its 60 years of existence, the Commission
had had its successes, but, in the last 20 years, it had lost credibility, because
of the “selfish political agendas of Member States”. Change had,
thus, been inevitable, if the international community wished to achieve the
human rights objectives of the United Nations. And, while Kenya was proud to
stand up and be counted among the membership that had made that transformation
a reality, it would urge the wider Assembly not to lose sight of the pitfalls
that had led to the Commission’s credibility deficit.
ZHANG YISHAN ( China) said that, after 30 rounds of consultations
over five months, the Assembly had finally adopted the draft resolution on the
Human Rights Council. It had been an arduous course, full of disputes and challenges.
In order to fulfil the noble task entrusted to Member States by world leaders,
delegations had made tireless efforts during consultations, seeking common ground
and compromise. The creation of the new Council marked a historic moment. The
United Nations human rights body would be upgraded from a functional commission
of the Economic and Social Council to a subsidiary organ of the Assembly. The
status of human rights would be further promoted within the United Nation system.
The international community and people from all over the world had great expectations
in the Council and hoped it would play its due role.
Among other things, he said that the resolution had reaffirmed
important human rights principles, such as the need to respect historical, cultural
and religious backgrounds. In addition, it had solved the long-standing problem
of underrepresentation of Asian countries in the Human Rights Commission, by
redistributing regional seats, based on the principle of equitable geographic
distribution. At the same time, however, the resolution failed to fully reflect
the concerns of many developing countries, including China. First, it did not
provide effective guarantees to prevent political confrontation, caused by country-specific
resolutions, which had become a chronic disease of the Human Rights Commission.
Second, the universal periodic review to be developed by the Council might overlap
with the work of human rights treaty bodies and special mechanisms, thus increasing
the burdens for developing countries. Third, recommendations by the Council
would be limited to the General Assembly.
RONALDO MOTA SARDENBERG ( Brazil), on behalf of Colombia, Guatemala,
Panama, Paraguay and Uruguay, said that the establishment of the Council in
replacement of the Human Rights Commission was a watershed in the protection
and promotion of human rights, but it was not an end in itself. The new Council
was a process that began with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Although
reshaping the human rights machinery was essential, one must not lose sight
of the fact that, at the end of the day, the members of the old, and often criticized,
Commission would be the very same members of the new Council. Thus, the approach
of all States to human rights had to be reshaped. It was a complex, and sometimes
torturous, negotiating process that led to the final draft resolution adopted
today. The efforts and resolve of the whole membership, however, had prevailed.
As outlined, he said, the new Council was definitely an important
achievement, but it had its imperfections. Hopefully, those would be corrected
through the day-to-day practice of the new body. The text should have included,
in a more comprehensive fashion, the concepts of dialogue and cooperation as
instruments for the treatment of human rights violations. Experience showed
that, as a rule, politicizing human rights tended to be counterproductive, if
not accompanied by positive incentives, such as cooperation and capacity-building.
Regrettably, the proposal of a global report was also not inserted into the
final draft. Monitoring the human rights situation from a global perspective
would be an essential practice, allowing for the mitigation of political selectivity
and double standards. That had been the subject of some well-founded criticism
of the work of the Human Rights Commission.
Finally, he said he deeply regretted that the representation
of the Latin American and Caribbean Group in the Council, as compared to the
Commission, had decreased by 27 per cent. He understood that regions with increased
numbers of countries should expand their presence, but there was no decrease
in the number of countries in his region. So, he failed to see why its representation
had been reduced so drastically. Nevertheless, the adoption today of the resolution
was long overdue. The Commission had started its work in Geneva last Monday,
and the main concern was to avoid a “protection gap” created by
a waning Commission, while a new structure was still lacking. The persistence
of such a situation would have temporarily undermined the United Nations system
for the protection of human rights. In addition, the creation of the new Council
would now free the agenda, and allow delegations to consider other fundamental
reform issues.
ROSEMARY BANKS (New Zealand), also speaking on behalf of Canada
and Australia (CANZ), said the establishment of the Human Rights Council represented
a new commitment to international human rights standards. CANZ had supported
the resolution, as its key elements provided for a more effective human rights
body than the Commission on Human Rights, including its enhanced status as a
General Assembly subsidiary body; a higher threshold for membership; and a commitment
by Council members to uphold the highest standards in the protection and promotion
of human rights. The resolution also provided for the Council to improve its
operations by a review process.
When negotiations had begun, there had been many hopes for
the Council, he said. Agreement had not been reached on all, however. The Council
must avoid the shortcomings of the Human Rights Commission. CANZ would have
liked the resolution to contain an even stronger threshold for membership. The
CANZ delegations pledged that they would not vote onto the Council, countries
that were under sanctions of the Security Council for human rights related reasons.
To make the Council a success, it was necessary to cultivate a new culture that
was inclusive, and in which there was no place for double standards. The Council
would be effective if it, among other things, adopted a robust work programme.
The Council must also ensure that its voice gave hope to those whose rights
had been violated. CANZ looked forward to working with the Council, as it embarked
on the critically important mission with which it had been entrusted.
JOSE LUIS GUTERRES (Timor-Leste) said his delegation would
have preferred if negotiations had continued for a time, to ensure that the
Organization had reached consensus on the creation of the Council. Timor-Leste
shared the views on membership in the Council that had been expressed by, among
others, the European Union and the United States. It would, therefore, not vote
for membership candidates that were under sanctions by the Security Council.
Timor-Leste would, nevertheless, work cooperatively with the newly established
Human Rights Council.
NIRUPAM SEN ( India) said the United Nations had shown that,
despite all its critics, it could deliver; it could create an organ with a high
threshold, and it could achieve broad agreement on important issues. India was
committed to the enlargement of human freedoms throughout the world, and believed
that the newly established Council, which would recognize the importance of
civil society in the area of promoting and protecting human rights, was a major
credit to the Organization.
Because of the spirit of accommodation and compromise that
had permeated the negotiations, India was confident that there were no real
contradictions between what was in the text and what most delegations would
like to achieve. India stood firmly by the text, regarding its affirmation of
the powers of the General Assembly in the area of human rights and concerning
its avoidance of Security Council conditionality or encroachment. India also
supported the emphasis on the right to development, which most Member States
had wanted to be included in the text. To that end, he added that, if the international
community were to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015, there was
no time to lose. Closely following emerging ideas on the right to development
and ensuring that that right became a reality, would be the best way to attain
those noble goals.
MUNIR AKRAM ( Pakistan) said he had voted in favour of the
draft. He had always agreed that the United Nations human rights machinery was
in need of a comprehensive overhaul, but the 2005 Summit had focused only on
replacing the Commission with a new Human Rights Council. He was not convinced
that the new body, in itself, would significantly improve the manner in which
human rights were considered within the United Nations. He, therefore, attached
significance to the provisions calling for a review and rationalization of the
rest of the human rights machinery -- the proliferated, duplicative 46 special
procedures, the composition and operation of the Office of the High Commissioner
for Human Rights, the utilization of the Subcommission, the streamlining of
the “1503” procedures and consultation with civil society. Hopefully,
the Human Rights Council would complete the review during the first year of
its existence, and report back to the General Assembly.
As mandated, he said, the new Council would adopt a more cooperative
approach to the promotion and protection of human rights. However, the resolution
had not removed the underlying reasons for the politicization and confrontation
that had become a hallmark of the Commission. The latter body was discredited,
not so much by the worst violators, but the readiness of its members to condemn
each other, rather than help each other. Hopefully, the new Council, with its
new configuration, would build safeguards against the arbitrary and discriminatory
targeting of developing countries, especially Islamic countries. The new body
should also elaborate arrangements for the new universal review process. That
should be based on a cooperative approach, and objective and verified information.
It should not become another avenue for the selective targeting of developing
countries. He was glad that the Council’s membership reflected an equitable
distribution of seats among the five regional groups, but conditions and procedures
for election were unprecedented, especially for a subsidiary organ.
Having established that precedent, similar benchmarks of performance
and commitments should also be incorporated in election to other United Nations
bodies, especially the economic bodies, based on fulfilment of agreed commitments,
such as the 0.7 per cent official development assistance (ODA). The Council
and the General Assembly also had the moral and legal responsibility to promote
respect for religions, prophets and cultures, and to halt and reverse the phenomenon
of Islamophobia. Hopefully, such action would be pursued, in view of the urgency
of the issue. While today the decision to establish the new Human Rights Council
had been taken, the two resolutions on development and Economic and Social Council
reform remained to be approved. He was concerned by the resistance from some
countries to proposals to fulfil the international commitments to development
goals. Now that the Human Rights Council was “out of the way”, the
Assembly President’s first priority should be to secure adoption, if possible
by consensus or the widest possible majority, of the two resolutions on development
and Economic and Social Council reform.
GILLES NOGHÈS (Monaco), also speaking on behalf of Andorra
and San Marino, said his delegation believed that overall United Nations reform
should aim to strengthen the Organization and its work, in all its mandated
fields, including human rights. He applauded the lead negotiators on the text,
including the Ambassadors of South Africa and Panama, and the President of the
Assembly. Monaco had believed, along with the overwhelming majority of United
Nations Member States, that the text should have gone further, to ensure the
credibility of the new Council. But, it, nevertheless, did include certain assurances
that the Council would work effectively to promote and protect human rights
worldwide.
ROMY TINCOPA ( Peru) noted that, without respect for human
rights, there could be no human civilization. Peru had participated in the Commission
on Human Rights for the last 20 years, and presently chaired the Commission,
reflecting its firm commitment to the protection of human rights. Peru welcomed
the creation of the new multilateral body with a robust mandate, focusing mainly
on the victims of human rights abuse. Since 1948, the United Nations had developed
a greater capacity in its ability to promote and protect human rights. The Universal
Declaration of Human Rights elevated human rights to ethical and legal values,
at the universal level.
With the creation of the new Council, Peru hoped members would strive to observe
human rights in the broader sense, and that the Council would adopt decisions
without discrimination or political selectivity, he said. Peru also hoped that
dialogue and cooperation would be essential components in the prevention of
human rights violations. Peru also regretted the decrease in the representation
of Latin America in the new Council.
DOMINGOS FERREIRA ( Sao Tome and Principe), on behalf of the
Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries, welcomed the adoption of the draft
resolution that established the Human Rights Council. With that important step
in the implementation of the decisions of the 2005 Summit, the United Nations
would be better equipped to promote and protect all human rights and fundamental
freedoms for all. The members of the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries
would actively participate in the work of the new body, and contribute to the
effective fulfilment of its mandate.
TAMAR TCHITANAVA ( Georgia) welcomed the adoption of the resolution.
She was very much in favour of the new Council, and would do everything possible
to support it. Unfortunately, she had not been present during the voting, and
had she been in the room, she would have voted “yes”.
Right of Reply
Speaking in exercise of the right of reply, the representative
of Cuba said that the United States could not tell Cuba and Venezuela not to
come forth with a reply, because they could not possibly have one. Cuba certainly
did. Imperialism persisted in the tradition of self-declaring moral superiority
over those who were defending human dignity. The main violator of human rights
did not recognize the right to development or health. Hypocritically, the Bush
administration claimed the right to practice torture as a counter-terrorism
instrument, arbitrarily detaining people and denying their fundamental rights
-- all on the basis of mere suspicion of some link with terrorism -- spying
on their own citizens, and bombing citizens in the name of freedom and democracy.
She asked how a country like the United States could demand
a seat on the Human Rights Council. The United States Government had no moral,
as a basis to blame any country for anything, on the basis of its human rights
record. Just a few weeks ago, human rights experts analyzed violations committed
in the detention centre of the United States Government, in territory illegally
occupied in Guantanamo, and found attempts by that Government to legalize torture,
thereby violating international instruments to which Washington was a party.
With what morality could the United States Government demand anything of any
other nation in the area of human rights, if its own troops were treating prisoners
inhumanely in the Abu Ghraib prisons, and offending and attacking the most sacred
sentiment of Muslims worldwide? What lessons on the promotion and protection
of human rights could be given by those, who left thousands of their own nationals
vulnerable, when Hurricane Katrina devastated Louisiana?
It was unacceptable that a country or a group of countries
took on the right to interpret the text of a resolution in a way that satisfied
the interests of the United States Government, she said. That country systematically
and massively violated human rights. She would like to see if the European Union,
CANZ and others, which today expressed their “whimsical” interpretation
of the resolution, would stand against the presence of the United States as
a member of the Council, as a human rights violator. There were so many lies
that needed clarification.
She said that the United States attacked her country on political
grounds, precisely because it defended, protected and promoted the human rights
of all its people. It justified the embargo against Cuba, and not because there
were any human rights violations there; there was a true democracy for Cubans
and a serious commitment to social and economic development. For Cuba, there
was no way of turning back along that path, despite opposition and aggression
from the greatest power in history, she said.
Source:
United Nations |