Hollywood loves using the "it takes a thief to catch a thief"
plot in its movies. But even the most creative scriptwriter
couldn't top the real-life plot twist the U.N. Commission on Human
Rights will have concocted when Libya becomes its chairman.
That's right -- Libya. One of the world's worst abusers of human
rights will head what is supposed to be the world's most
prestigious international forum for promoting those rights.
How did this happen? Chairmanship of the 53-member Commission
rotates between geographic regions every year. The chairmanship for
the term beginning in March 2003 belongs to Africa, whose nations
are set to nominate Libya.
Ruled by the notorious dictator Muammar Qadhafi, Libya has long
supported international terrorism. The U.S. State Department lists
it as a state sponsor of terrorism. For years, it harbored the two
individuals responsible for bombing Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie,
Scotland, and it still refuses to accept responsibility or pay
compensation. Worse, says Under Secretary of State John Bolton,
Libya is trying to acquire weapons of mass destruction.
Its human-rights record is awful. According to the State
Department's 2001 "Country Reports on Human Rights Practices," the
Libyan government: (1) relies on its courts to suppress domestic
opposition; (2) uses torture to interrogate and punish prisoners;
(3) arrests and detains its citizens arbitrarily and often holds
prisoners incommunicado for years; and (4) refuses prisoners the
right to a fair public trial. In addition, the report says, Libya
"restricts freedom of speech, press, assembly, association and
religion."
As if all this wasn't enough, Libya also stands accused of
trafficking in human slavery. This is the country other members of
the U.N. Commission believe can best serve as spokesman for their
efforts to promote human rights?
But for certain U.N. member nations, three things compensate for
Libya's painfully deficient human-rights record. The first is that
it's located in the correct geographic region. The second is the
opportunity it gives them to thump democratic nations (particularly
the United States) that often criticize developing countries for
their human-rights records. The third is the determination of some
nations to undermine the goals of the Commission on Human Rights
and conceal their abuses.
What countries could see value in undermining human rights?
Commission members such as China, Cuba, Sudan, Syria and Zimbabwe
spring to mind. No doubt Libya can count on their eager support in
quashing investigations into true human-rights abuses, instead
focusing the Commission's resources on issues like the death
penalty in the United States -- a cause sure to elicit support from
human-rights groups while leaving the far worse records of
repressive governments carefully cloaked.
These countries have become quite effective at pursuing this goal
in recent years. For instance, China has used its membership on the
Commission to defeat resolutions criticizing its human-rights
record, and Cuba used its influence to weaken criticism of its
record. Resolutions condemning Iran and Zimbabwe also failed to
elicit enough support to pass this past year, according to Human
Rights Watch.
This is the same Commission, incidentally, that refused to re-elect
the United States in 2001 in a fit of spite over President Bush's
opposition to such cherished U.N. icons as the International
Criminal Court and the Kyoto Protocol on global warming. At the
same time the Commission kicked out the United States, it agreed to
accept a new member: Sudan, a nation whose government has spent the
last few years bombing civilians, tolerating slavery and supporting
international terrorism.
After substantial lobbying, U.S. diplomats at the United Nations
succeeded in getting America back on the Commission -- just in
time, it seems, to enjoy the benefits of Libyan leadership. No
doubt the new chairman and Libya's allies will spend much of their
time making it difficult for the United States to advance the cause
of human rights.
Image is everything to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. The
body has no real authority other than its moral stature in naming
and shaming governments that violate human rights and abuse their
citizens. The past unwillingness of the Commission to name and
shame members for human-rights abuses, while doggedly carping at
free democratic nations for their relatively minor offenses, has
eroded its credibility. Naming Libya its chair sweeps away the
Commission's last remnants of respectability and lends support to
the belief that the United Nations is impeding human rights rather
than enforcing them.
Brett D.
Schaefer is the Jay Kingham fellow in international regulatory
affairs in the Center for International Trade and Economics at The
Heritage Foundation.
COMMENTARY Middle East
ed082202: Libyan Fox In The Human-Rights Henhouse
Aug 22, 2002 3 min read
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