The United Nations Commission on Human Rights, the world's most
important political body devoted to human rights concerns, is
halfway through its deliberations here. Each year delegates from
the 53 member states meet for six weeks to name the worst offending
countries and adopt resolutions condemning their abuses. For years,
however, the commission instead has been a haven for rogue
governments - who get elected to the body in order to shield
themselves from international scrutiny and criticism. The failure
of international leadership has become increasingly intolerable,
especially in an age when terrorism and repressive regimes go hand
in hand.
Indeed, the Commission on Human Rights no longer can be counted on
to "name and shame" even the most egregious violators. North Korea,
for example, knows how to bully its Asian neighbors in the United
Nations, so that not even overwhelming evidence of its misdeeds
will guarantee a tough resolution against the regime. Sudan quietly
uses the promise of oil to buy off potential critics.
Thus state groups, like the United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom, and private actors like Freedom
House, America's oldest human rights organization, release their
own "worst of the worst" guides to bad-guy governments. Their lists
include Burma, China, Cuba, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Uzbekistan and Vietnam. Between them,
these states engage in a raft of injustices -arbitrary arrests, the
employment of child soldiers and violence against women, to name a
few. Yet it's doubtful that any but a handful will be slapped with
critical resolutions by the commission.
Compare this Orwellian parlor game to the work of the original
Commission on Human Rights. Created in the aftermath of World War
II, the organization was headed by Eleanor Roosevelt. When the
Communist bloc delegates invoked America's race problems to
stonewall the commission's agenda, she wryly suggested they
exchange experts to inspect each other's discriminatory policies
(the Soviets declined). She pushed for the adoption of an
international bill of rights, believing that even a non-binding
statement of principles could help redraw the map of free
nations.
She was right. In 1948 the United Nations approved the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the commission's sparsely written
manifesto of political and social guarantees. For 60 years, it has
served as the Magna Carta of the modern human rights
movement.
The commission's accomplishment, at the start of the cold war,
would have been inconceivable without the moral prestige of its
leadership. A key figure was Rene Cassin, the French legal scholar,
who lost family members in Hitler's death camps and fought in the
French resistance. The hallmark of modern tyrannies, he argued, is
their denial of a common human nature, a negation that leads to all
the barbarous acts that have "outraged the conscience of
mankind."
The other decisive voice was that of Charles Malik, the Lebanese
ambassador, philosopher and outspoken Arab Christian. Malik
insisted that the declaration include Article 18: the right to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion, including the right to
change one's religious beliefs. Unless the proposed bill "can
create conditions which will allow man to develop ultimate
loyalties . . . over and above his loyalty to the State," he
warned, "we shall have legislated not for man's freedom but for his
virtual enslavement."
Back then, Muslim delegates balked at Article 18 - just as
they ignore it today. But the serpentine connections between
terrorism and faith-based dictatorships cannot be wished away. The
prospect of democracy in states like Afghanistan is bound up with
their willingness to endorse religious freedom. Saudi Arabia, home
of most of the 9/11 hijackers, allows virtually no freedom of
religion. Nigeria, increasingly devoted to Sharia, or Islamic law,
supports extrajudicial killings. As long as states like these are
allowed on the commission - at least 18 members are themselves
considered repressive - its proceedings will remain a
politicized sham.
The best hope of breaking their grip may be the creation of a
democracy caucus now being pushed by Chile, Poland, South Korea and
the United States. Caucus supporters are meeting here to discuss
how to outmaneuver the dictatorships and steer the commission back
to the core values of the United Nations Charter and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights.
The original Commission on Human Rights, acutely conscious of Nazi
atrocities, recognized an evil regime when it saw one. Today's
members should gaze a while longer into the abyss of our own
day - the mass graves in Iraq, the bombings in Madrid, the
North Korean death camps - and perhaps be shaken by a cold
breeze of moral clarity.
Joseph Loconte is a religion fellow at the Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in The New York Times.