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US decides to avoid losing fight for a seat on the new UN HR Council

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  • US decides to avoid losing fight for a seat on the new UN HR Council

    U.S. decides to avoid potentially losing fight for a seat on the new U.N.
    Human Rights Council

    AP Worldstream; Apr 07, 2006
    EDITH M. LEDERER

    The United States has decided to avoid a potentially losing fight for
    a seat on the new U.N. Human Rights Council this year, but 42
    countries have announced their candidacy, including Cuba and Iran.

    The four other veto-wielding permanent members of the U.N. Security
    Council _ Russia, China, Britain and France _ are among those seeking
    seats on the 47-nation council.

    But State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Thursday the United
    States would not be a candidate in the May 9 election though it will
    support and finance the new council, and will likely seek a seat next
    year.

    The United States was virtually alone in voting against the
    establishment of the council to replace the highly politicized and
    often criticized Human Rights Commission, arguing that the new body
    was only marginally better and wouldn't prevent rights-abusing
    countries from sitting on the council.

    The 53-member commission was discredited in recent years because some
    countries with terrible human rights records used their membership to
    protect one another from condemnation. Commission members in recent
    years included Sudan, Libya, Zimbabwe and Cuba.

    A key sticking point during the negotiations was U.S. insistence that
    members be elected by two-thirds of the 191-nation General Assembly _
    a step aimed at keeping out rights abusers. The U.S. effort failed,
    and members of the new council must be elected only by an absolute
    majority _ 96 member states.

    U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said the United States concluded that
    since the council has "fundamental flaws" Washington would skip this
    year's election and concentrate on other priorities including the
    overhaul of U.N. management.

    But he indicated that the United States was also concerned about
    whether it could win a contested election.

    President George W. Bush's administration has been strongly criticized
    in many countries for invading Iraq and for the U.S. treatment of
    prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and at Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad.

    During a U.S. National Security Council meeting earlier this week,
    U.S. officials had raised the possibility of U.S. defeat, said one
    person who was at the meeting and spoke on condition of anonymity
    because he was not authorized to speak about the closed session.

    Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Bolton recalled the U.S. defeat for
    a seat on the Human Rights Commission in a contested election in 2001
    and said the United States would face another contested election if it
    ran this year.

    "I think that a decision by us to run had to be a decision that we
    were going to win, and that would mean either defeating other Western
    candidates or getting some of the rest of them to withdraw," Bolton
    said. "I think our leverage this year in terms of trying to get the
    right kind of council, flawed as we think it is, is greater by not
    running ... but considering it next year." Some human rights groups
    and members of the U.S. Congress were dismayed at the U.S. decision.

    Tom Lantos, the ranking Democrat on the House International Relations
    Committee, called it "a major retrenchment in America's long struggle
    to advance the cause of human rights around the world." Kenneth Roth,
    executive director of Human Rights Watch, said "it's unfortunate that
    the Bush administration's disturbing human rights record means that
    the United States would hardly have been a shoe-in for election to the
    council. Today's decision not to run seems like an effort to make a
    virtue of necessity."

    The council was endorsed by key human rights groups, a dozen Nobel
    Peace Prize winners including former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, and
    170 countries who voted "yes" on the resolution creating it _
    including a surprise endorsement from Cuba.

    Under the rules for the new council, any U.N. member can announce its
    candidacy any time until the vote is completed. Countries can serve a
    maximum of two three-year terms and must leave the council before
    running again.

    To ensure global representation, Africa and Asia would have 13 seats
    each; Latin America and the Caribbean eight seats; Western nations,
    seven seats; and Eastern Europe, six seats.

    There are already eight candidates for the seven Western seats where
    the United States would have to run _ Britain, Canada, Finland,
    France, Germany, Greece, Portugal and Switzerland.

    Nine countries are seeking the eight Latin American and Caribbean
    seats _ Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru,
    Uruguay and Venezuela.

    In a statement appealing for support for its candidacy, Cuba said its
    people have made "tremendous achievements" in human rights, most
    importantly in exercising the right of self-determination against "the
    unilateral policy of hostility, aggression and blockade imposed on it
    by the superpower."

    So far, there are three African candidates _ Algeria, Mauritius, and
    Morocco. The nine Asian candidates to date are Bangladesh, Bahrain,
    China, India, Iran, Jordan, Pakistan, South Korea and Sri Lanka.
    There are 13 candidates for the six East European seats _ Albania,
    Armenia, Azerbaijan, the Czech Republic, Georgia, Hungary, Latvia,
    Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovenia and Ukraine.

    McCormack said that "since the credibility of the council depends on
    its membership, the United States will actively campaign on behalf of
    candidates genuinely committed to the promotion and protection of
    human rights and ... will also actively campaign against states that
    systematically abuse human rights."
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