I suppose the United Nations General Assembly should be
praised for
suspending Libya from the UN Human Rights
Council. Or should it?
After all, it was only last November that Libya
underwent
the Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review (UPR). The
UPR is the process by which all 192 member states of the UN are
subject to a review of their human rights record every four
years. According
to the UN Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights, the UPR “provides an opportunity for all States to
declare what actions they have taken to improve the human rights
situations in their countries and to overcome challenges to the
enjoyment of human rights.” This process puts notorious human
rights abusers like Libya on the same plane with the likes of
Luxembourg. Indeed, as recently as the day before Libya’s
suspension, the Human Rights Council was
scheduled to proceed with a vote on March 18
to
praise Libya’s human rights record based on
the results of the UPR.
The fact that Libya had a seat on the Human Rights Council
in the first place is an absurdity unto itself. But then again so
is the very existence of the Council whose other esteemed
members
include the likes of China, Cuba and Saudi Arabia.
Frankly, the Human Rights Council has about as much right to sit in
judgment of human rights as Charlie Sheen has to lecture American
youth about sobriety.
Of course, it wasn’t supposed to be this way. In fact it
was five years ago this month that the UN General Assembly
established the Human Rights Council to succeed the UN Human Rights
Commission. The Commission had been subject to heavy criticism for
including the world’s most notorious human rights abusers amongst
its ranks and for its unhealthy obsession with Israel. Indeed, in
2003, Libya was
elected to chair the Commission. The new
Human Rights Council was supposed to do away with such absurdities.
Then UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
described the establishment of the Council
as “historic” while then UN General Assembly President Jan Eliasson
of Sweden hailed the Council as “a significant
improvement.”
For its part, the Bush Administration had a far more
skeptical view and opposed the establishment of the Human Rights
Council. John Bolton, then U.S. Ambassador to the UN,
said
at the time, “We did not have sufficient confidence in this
text to be able to say that the Human Rights Council will be better
than its predecessor.” Not surprisingly, Bolton’s reservations have
to come to fruition. The UN Human Rights Council includes the
world’s most notorious human rights abusers amongst its ranks and
has an unhealthy obsession with Israel. I suppose it was a sign of
progress that Libya did not chair the Human Rights Council but it
still managed to get elected to the Council in 2010. While the Bush
Administration wisely steered clear of the Human Rights Council,
the Obama Administration legitimized the Kafkaesque body by
winning a seat on the Council in 2009 and
then last year
agreed to submit itself to the UPR. Despite
the Obama Administration’s involvement with the Council, it has not
been an improvement over its predecessor.
Now, of course, the UN could always change the name of its
human rights body again. Maybe next time the General Assembly will
establish the UN Human Rights Committee or perhaps they will opt to
call it the UN Human Rights Congress. They can call it by whatever
name they please. The problem isn’t with the name. The problem is
with the United Nations itself.
In the grand scheme of things, the UN can be best
described as a democratic body many of whose members don’t practice
democracy at home. It is these countries in the African and Asian
regional blocs which comprise 55% of the member states in the UN.
Many of these states are part of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference (OIC). With a majority like this, is it any wonder
Muammar Qaddafi’s Libya could not only be elected the Human Rights
Council but be praised by it for its human rights record? After
all, China, Cuba and Saudi Arabia are Libya’s peers.
Yet let us not forget that Libya was elected
to the Human Rights Council less than a year ago with the
approval of 155 of the 192 member states of the UN.
Of course, the vote was done by secret ballot so
we don’t know precisely which member states voted for Libya. But we
do know that Libya was voted in by enough of them that it would
have received support from some European nations and perhaps even
the United States.
As long as any Western nation is comfortable with choosing
the likes of Libya to the Human Rights Council, then what do human
rights really mean? Human rights obviously don’t mean anything to
authoritarian and totalitarian regimes. But what do human rights
mean to Western countries when they are prepared to elect
authoritarian and totalitarian regimes to the Human Rights Council?
Are these countries so steeped in moral equivalence and
equivocation that they are afraid to pass judgment against
authoritarian and totalitarian regimes? Well, authoritarian and
totalitarian regimes sure aren’t afraid to assail the United States
and other Western countries. Should it come as any surprise to them
that Libya could be praised for its human rights record on a body
where other authoritarian and totalitarian regimes have a vote?
Under the present circumstances and for the foreseeable future, I
can only conclude that questions pertaining to human rights are
best addressed outside the UN. The UN and human rights simply don’t
mix.
Melvin| 3.2.11 @ 7:37AM
Can someone tell me the relevance of this organization? One side of the UN's mouth it is condemning Qaddafi, then the other side is telling the world that Mo Mo is a really swell guy.
The United States just funded a $100 million security upgrade to the UN because the tyrants and despots were afraid that someone was out to get them.
None of the other member Nation's paid one single dime in this security upgrade the United States borrowed money to pay for the whole thing.
What could a $100 million buy. Well, for starters it could be a $100 million less that we have to pay back to the Chinese. A $100 million to pay down our debt.
I know I should not ask it, and I probably know the answer, but who authorized this very expensive expenditure?
Was it debated in Congress? Probably not because the Democrat Congress didn't produce a spending bill for how many years?
This organization uses the floor of the UN to denigrate this Nation and it's people and it has the gall to demand this and that.
If the current Congress is looking for organizations to defund, the United Nations is a good start. Let Hollywood support it, half the actors and actresses have some sort of stupid UN bestowed title anyway.
Ken (Old Texican)| 3.2.11 @ 9:18AM
Aaron,
well spoken sir. The UN IS absurd.
Hillel| 3.2.11 @ 10:32AM
Another grand dream destroyed by reality. As the old slogan went.."Let's get the UN out of the US and the US out of the UN>"
PhilTheCapitalistPig| 3.2.11 @ 11:53AM
LOL.. This is comedy. Let's see, Libya, Cuba, and Venezuela are on the UN human rights counsel.
That is the 1940 equivalent of a human rights counsel consisting of Stalin, Hitler, and mussolini.
My god, can we stop funding this dog and pony show?
Sam Levi| 3.2.11 @ 12:11PM
You do realize that the UN is just the prefix un; like unamerican......
Occam's Tool| 3.2.11 @ 1:47PM
The UN is a sick and dismal joke; UNICEF, for example, opposes international adoptions. Vermin and Scum. Put it in Saudi Arabia.
Jenny| 3.2.11 @ 2:15PM
UN offers so many ways for big countries to manipulate weak countries and therefore it is very needed and desirable by few big countries. Jenny from sulfate free shampoo
Dancquill| 3.2.11 @ 4:29PM
The UN gives human rights abusers the right to blame the United States for every abuse while committing genocide and gross abuse against their own peoples. The words that best describe this, in my opinion is "insane, inane, inspid and illogical". It's very PC though, so the left has something to defend in this. In short, I prefer right vs wrong as opposed to your big vs little justification.
Mistral| 3.2.11 @ 3:50PM
The UN is a gravey train that wastes money by the billions; pays so-called experts to implement redundant programmes under false pretenses and it is full of hypocrits who mouth the charter of human rights but don't practice what they preach. It is high time the USA pulled out of it and let it collapse financially and unnaturally. The current Gen Sec is a joker like his predecessor but he certainly gets paid well out of national tax payers funds for his nonsense.
stan redmond| 3.2.11 @ 4:50PM
The best part of being on the human rights board is YOU get to review your own countries IMPROVEMENT of your human rights record. For example. Saudi Arabia can say they have drastically improved their human rights for woman by using sharper knives for cutting off the hands and feet of thieves. North Korea can improve their human rights by cleaning their AK-47s before they execute someone. Heck, even Al Quaida can claim an improvement of human rights by sterilizing their butcher knives before chopping off the heads of their victims.
I frown on cussing but what a f-in joke the UN is.
Christopher Holland| 3.2.11 @ 5:37PM
The only human right the US needs with the UN is the right not to give them any more money. Start practicing that one and you might see some real changes. Otherwise, forget it.
Chester Scott| 3.6.11 @ 11:17PM
The rebels have said he will be killed and the USA have said he will be killed and the UK have the SAS in Libya to kill him and his sons, and he is ACTING IN SELF DEFENCE , tryng to save his life and his sons, and Gadaffi is not another Saddam Hussain and the USA cannot use the same arguments of attacking his neighbours, and going to attack the west.
WHAT HAVE THE USA PROMISED THE REBELS IF THEY GET RID OF GADAFFI?
Well the USA will take the oil that is for sure....
http://breastenlargementwarning.com/
العاب بنات | 4.11.12 @ 6:10PM
is good