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BAKU: Azeri Admission To UN Rights Body Causes Mixed Responses

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  • BAKU: Azeri Admission To UN Rights Body Causes Mixed Responses

    AZERI ADMISSION TO UN RIGHTS BODY CAUSES MIXED RESPONSES

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    May 18 2006

    Azerbaijan's admission to the newly-established UN Human Rights
    Council early last week has drawn conflicting responses from the
    local and international community. The body is in charge of monitoring
    human rights around the world and assistance to various countries in
    improving appropriate laws.

    The Azeri membership at the council prompted praise from officials
    and some observers, amid severe criticism from the opposition and
    international rights groups. The country was elected from the Eastern
    Europe group, beating Armenia, Albania, Hungary, Georgia, Latvia,
    Lithuania and Slovenia. Also elected to the council were China, Cuba,
    Russia, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, who have been roundly criticized
    for a poor human rights record. The council replaced the UN Commission
    on Human Rights (UNCHR) established in 1946.

    The entity has been repeatedly criticized for the composition of its
    membership. In particular, several of its member countries themselves
    were believed by some to have dubious rights records. Another criticism
    was that the Commission has not been used for constructive discussion
    of human rights issues, but as a forum for politically selective
    finger-pointing and criticism. The desire of states with problematic
    human rights records to be elected to the Commission is largely to
    defend themselves from such attacks. The chairwoman of the standing
    parliamentary commission on human rights, Rabiyyat Aslanova, praised
    the approval of the Azeri bid. "Azerbaijan's admission to the council
    shows that the UN General Assembly acknowledges that human rights are
    being safeguarded and the democratic reforms are successfully underway
    in the country. The membership is yet another accomplishment we have
    made." The MP said Azerbaijan will become the first South Caucasus
    country to be represented on the council.

    "Neighboring states had limited opportunities to be admitted. Armenia
    was not admitted to the council due to the blatant violations of human
    rights there. It is not fortuitous that Azerbaijan gained the most
    votes [among them]," she said. Aslanova said that by gaining admission,
    Baku has acquired an additional opportunity to convey the truth about
    the long-standing Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict it faces with
    Armenia to the world community. The chairman of the opposition Popular
    Front Party Ali Karimli said the admission means "failure of the UN as
    an entity". "If Azerbaijan and other totalitarian countries are elected
    members to the Human Rights Council, the UN shows its decadence,"
    the opposition leader maintained. Sardar Jalaloglu, the first deputy
    chair of another opposition party, the Azerbaijan Democratic Party
    included in the main Azadlig bloc, said the United Nations has lately
    turned into a "stage of games" of superpowers, which tarnishes its
    image. "Despite blatant human rights abuses in Azerbaijan, I hope
    that at least after this [UN council admission] the situation in the
    country will change for the better," he said. International media
    watchdog Reporters Without Borders came out against Azerbaijan's
    admission. It regarded as disgrace the admission of several repressive
    countries, where freedom of expression is violated the most, to the UN
    body, citing Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, China, Cuba, Nigeria,
    Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia. The organization said
    in a statement that vesting the task of protecting human rights in
    ten countries with widespread violations of journalists' rights and
    freedom of expression is unacceptable. "We therefore don't expect
    anything good from this entity," it said. The group said China and
    Cuba are the largest jails for journalists, while censorship reigns
    in Saudi Arabia and Tunisia. In Russia, the Kremlin subdued all the
    TV channels and other leading mass media. In Bangladesh, Nigeria,
    Pakistan and Algeria, the rights of journalists are infringed upon on
    a daily basis and they could be subject to arrests. Reporters Without
    Borders said those responsible for the killing of two journalists
    in Azerbaijan have yet to be punished. Another international rights
    group, Human Rights Watch, earlier opposed Azerbaijan's membership
    at the council. In a letter to the UN, HRW suggested that along with
    six other countries, it should not be included in the body, citing
    numerous rights violations. The US ambassador to the UN John Bolton
    made an ironic comment on the accession of some countries with poor
    rights records to the new council, calling this "a bad joke".
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