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Cuba, Saudi Arabia And China Win Seats On New Human Rights CouncilDe

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  • Cuba, Saudi Arabia And China Win Seats On New Human Rights CouncilDe

    CUBA, SAUDI ARABIA AND CHINA WIN SEATS ON NEW HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL DESPITE POOR RIGHTS RECORDS
    Edith M. Lederer

    AP Worldstream
    May 10, 2006

    Cuba, Saudi Arabia, China and Russia won seats on the new U.N. Human
    Rights Council despite their poor human rights records but two rights
    abusers, Iran and Venezuela, were defeated.

    Human rights groups said Tuesday they were generally pleased with
    the 47 members elected to the council, which will replace the highly
    politicized Human Rights Commission. It was discredited in recent
    years because some countries with terrible rights records used their
    membership to protect one another from condemnation.

    "The spoiler governments, the governments that have a history of trying
    to undermine the protection of human rights through their membership
    on the old commission are now a significantly reduced minority when
    it comes to the council," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of
    Human Rights Watch. "That doesn't guarantee that the council will be
    a success but it is a step in the right direction."

    Even before the vote, Roth said, "the council was a vast improvement
    over the discredited commission" because many countries that violate
    human rights who had been commission members didn't seek seats on
    the council including Sudan, Zimbabwe, Libya, Congo, Syria, Vietnam,
    Nepal, Sri Lanka, Eritrea and Ethiopia.

    Yvonne Terlingen, U.N. representative for Amnesty International,
    said it was "fairly pleased" that the council members "constitute a
    good basis to make a fresh start with creating a strong and effective
    human rights body."

    "Some countries have been elected with weak human rights records,
    but they also are now committed to uphold the highest human rights
    standards," she said.

    The United States opposed the establishment of the council, saying it
    did not go far enough to prevent rights abusers from winning seats,
    and the U.S.

    decided against being a candidate.

    But U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Kristen Silverberg said "on
    the whole, we think it is an improvement over the commission."

    "We are committed to engaging actively in the coming weeks with all
    of the elected members ... to make sure that this body is effective,"
    she said. "We think that the real test of this council will be whether
    it can take effective action in serious cases of human rights abuse
    like Darfur, ...

    Burma, North Korea and other places."

    Senator Norm Coleman, a Minnesota Republican and critic of the U.N.,
    criticized the vote, saying Cuba's election showed the new council
    suffers from the same weakness as the commission. The new council,
    he said, "is the perfect example of the U.N.'s failure to reform."

    Anne Bayefsky, an adjunct professor at Columbia University Law School
    who runs a web site on U.N. activities, said that at least 20 countries
    that were elected "are ranked `partly free' or `not free' by Freedom
    House," a Washington-based organization that promotes democracy around
    the world.

    "That's an astonishing number of countries that have made it on to
    the U.N.'s primary human rights organ," she said.

    Under the rules for the council, any U.N. member was eligible to run
    and 64 countries submitted their candidacies but Kenya dropped out at
    the last minute. Members needed to be elected by an absolute majority
    of the 191 U.N.

    states _ 96 members.

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

    Roth said Human Rights Watch would have preferred that Cuba, China,
    Russia, Saudi Arabia and Azerbaijan had not won seats because of
    their poor human rights records.

    "The good news is that two of the least deserving governments were
    not elected," he said. "Both Venezuela and Iran failed to make the
    cut. That is a step in the right direction."

    Richard Grenell, spokesman for the U.S. Mission to the United
    Nations, said Iran's defeat "just shows their lack of standing in
    the international community."

    Russia's U.N. Ambassador Sergey Lavrov congratulated his countrymen
    and women for being elected in the first round, expressing hope that
    Moscow's presence "will contribute to the balanced composition of this
    council and to the balanced ... discussion of the human rights agenda."

    Russia was a candidate in the most hotly contested regional group _
    Eastern Europe _ which fielded 13 candidates for six seats. It was
    the only group where a second round of voting was needed.

    The other winners were Azerbaijan, Czech Republic, Poland, Romania
    and Ukraine. The East European losers were Albania, Armenia, Georgia,
    Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovenia.

    With Kenya dropping out, Africa fielded 13 candidates for the 13
    seats and all won: Algeria, Cameroon, Djibouti, Gabon, Ghana, Mali,
    Mauritius, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia and Zambia.

    The 13 Asians elected to the council were Bangladesh, Bahrain, China,
    India, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Philippines,
    South Korea, Saudi Arabia and Sri Lanka. Those defeated were Iran,
    Iraq, Kyrgystan, Lebanon and Thailand.

    In Latin American and the Caribbean, the 8 seats went to Argentina,
    Brazil, Cuba, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru and Uruguay. Nicaragua
    and Venezuela were defeated.

    The 7 countries elected from the Western bloc were Britain, Canada,
    Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands and Switzerland. Greece and
    Portugal lost their bid for seats.

    ___

    Associated Press Writer Paul Burkhardt contributed to this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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