Delivered July 26, 2007
Since the birth of the United Nations, protecting and advancing fundamental human rights has been one of the organization's primary objectives. The drafters of the U.N. Charter included a pledge by member states "to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women."[1] U.N. treaties and conventions, such as the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, which the General Assembly passed in 1948, form the core of international standards for human rights.
Yet the U.N.'s recent record in promoting fundamental human rights is riddled with failure and inaction. For nearly six decades, the U.N. Commission on Human Rights (CHR) epitomized this failure as the premier U.N. human rights body charged with reviewing the human rights performance of states and promoting human rights around the world.[2] Sadly, the Commission devolved into a feckless organization, which human rights abusers used to block criticism, and a forum for attacks on Israel.[3] The Commission's disrepute grew so great that even former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan acknowledged, "We have reached a point at which the Commission's declining credibility has cast a shadow on the reputation of the United Nations system as a whole, and where piecemeal reforms will not be enough."[4]
After lengthy deliberations and negotiations, the U.N. General Assembly voted to replace the Commission with a new Human Rights Council in March 2006.[5] Regrettably, during the negotiations, the General Assembly rejected many basic reforms and standards that had been proposed to ensure that the Council would not repeat the mistakes of the Commission.[6] For instance, the U.S. wanted a much smaller body than the 53-member Commission to enable it to act more easily; a high threshold for election to the Council (a two-thirds vote of the General Assembly); and a prohibition on electing nations to the Council that are under U.N. Security Council sanction for human rights abuses.
A Sanctuary for Abusers
Negotiators produced a 47-member Council that is only marginally smaller than the Commission. The HRC has no hard criteria for membership other than quotas for each of the regional groups in the U.N. and a requirement that Council members be elected by a simple majority of the General Assembly (currently 97 of 192 votes). No state, no matter how poor its human rights record, is barred from membership. Even states under Security Council sanction for human rights abuses may become members.
The resolution, instead, instructs U.N. member states that "when electing members of the Council, [they] shall take into account the contribution of candidates to the promotion and protection of human rights."[7] Candidates are also asked to submit "voluntary pledges and commitments" on their qualifications for the Council based on their past and future adherence to, and observance of, human rights standards. The toothlessness of this instruction quickly became evident when notorious human rights abusers Algeria, Cuba, China, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Russia ran for election, asserting their strong commitment to human rights and pledging their commitment to such standards in the future.[8]
Because of these weaknesses, the U.S. voted against the resolution creating the HRC and announced that it would not run for a seat on the Council, but would consider running in the future if the Council proved effective.[9] "Absent stronger mechanisms for maintaining credible membership, the United States could not join consensus on this resolution," explained then U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton. "We did not have sufficient confidence in this text to be able to say that the HRC would be better than its predecessor."[10] Ambassador Bolton's statement has proven prophetic.
Less than half of the old Commission's members in 2005 were considered "free" by Freedom House.[11] China, Cuba, Egypt, Pakistan, Sudan, and Zimbabwe-some of the world's worst human rights abusers-routinely used their positions on the Council to block scrutiny of their own practices and to launch spurious attacks on other countries for political reasons (e.g., Israel) or for speaking openly about their human rights violations (e.g., the U.S.).
The May 2006 election showed that simply creating a new Council had not convinced the General Assembly to spurn the candidacies of human rights abusers. Overall, the Council's membership in 2006 was only marginally better than the Commission's membership in 2005. The first Council election in 2006 produced a Council in which 25 out of 47 members (53 percent) were ranked "free" by Freedom House.[12] Some of the more disreputable human rights abusers-Burma, North Korea, Sudan, and Zimbabwe-did not run for seats. Iran and Venezuela ran for seats but were unsuccessful, although Venezuela received enough votes (101) to win a seat if other states had not won more support.[13]
Despite these minor successes, a number of states with dismal human rights records won seats, including Algeria, Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Cuba, China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Russia.[14]
An Anti-Israeli Platform
All Council members pledge their commitment to human rights standards when they run for election. As a Council member, a country is supposed to "uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights."[15] This requirement did not translate into better promotion and protection of human rights at the HRC. On the contrary, the Council's actions reveal a profound lack of commitment to human rights. Council decisions reveal that the bulk of its membership has declined to scrutinize major violators of human rights and has instead focused disproportionately on censuring Israel.
In its first year, the Council failed to address ongoing repression in Belarus, China, Cuba, North Korea, and Zimbabwe and many other dire human rights situations around the world. Nor did the HRC censure the government of Sudan for its role in the genocide in Darfur. Instead, it held one special session on Darfur and adopted one mild resolution and four mild decisions expressing "concern" regarding the human rights and humanitarian situation in Darfur, dispatching a "High-Level Mission to assess the human rights situation in Darfur and the needs of the Sudan in this regard."[16] However, the Council did find the time to hold three special sessions on Israel and pass 10 resolutions condemning Israel and another four decisions on Israel's human rights record.[17] More than 70 percent of the Council's country-specific resolutions and decisions have focused on Israel.
Even the discredited Commission had a better record. Over a 40-year period, only 30 percent of its resolutions condemning specific states for human rights violations focused on Israel.[18]
Some of this disappointing performance can be blamed on the negligible difference in quality between the Council's membership and the Commission's membership. The situation is aggravated by the shift in proportional representation of regions. The Commission had greater representation of Western democracies, while Africa and Asia control a majority of the Council. This has dramatically increased the influence of groups like the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) and the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC). Members of the NAM also held a majority of seats in the Council's first year. The OIC held 17 seats, more than the one-third (16 seats) required to call a special session. Unsurprisingly, both groups have repeatedly used their influence to attack Israel and to protect abusive states from Council scrutiny.
However, the most frustrating aspect of the Council's first year has been the reluctance of free, democratic states, including South Africa and India, to support human rights efforts on the Council. A U.N. Watch analysis of significant actions taken by the Council during its first year concluded that only 13 of the Council's 47 members were net positive contributors to its human rights agenda. Four free democracies-Indonesia, Mali, Senegal, and South Africa- were among the countries with the worst record.[19]
Prospects for Reform
Based on the past year's record in the Council, the 2007 membership, and the record of the General Assembly, the prospects for reform or improvement are dim.
The prospects for improved performance by the Council depend entirely on the members of the HRC who set and adopt the agenda, rules, procedures, and resolutions, and on the General Assembly that elects the Council membership and could reform the body in the future.
The resolution creating the Council requires the General Assembly to review the status of the Council within five years, or by 2011. However, many member states have clearly indicated that they are pleased to have a dysfunctional Council and support for strengthening the body in the General Assembly cannot be counted on.
An illustration of this is the May 2007 election of members to the Council. The 2007 election marked a regression from 2006.[20] The number of "free" countries on the Council according to Freedom House rankings declined, and the number of "not free" countries increased. [21]
The only significant victory was blocking Belarus from winning a seat. Yet until about a week before the election, Belarus and Slovenia were the only two candidates for the two open Eastern European seats. Only enormous pressure from human rights groups and the U.S. persuaded Bosnia and Herzegovina to run, narrowly denying Belarus a seat on the Council.[22] However, Angola, Egypt, Qatar, and Bolivia- states with dismal human rights records-were elected easily.[23]
An additional concern is that, unlike the robust competition for seats in the 2006 election, only two regions-Eastern European States and Western Europe and Other States-offered more candidates than the number of available seats in the 2007 election.[24] The decision of the African, Asian, and Latin American and Caribbean regions to offer only enough candidates to fill their open seats marked a disturbing return to the practices of the Commission and defeated the purpose of competitive elections in the General Assembly, which were supposed to offer a larger choice of possible candidates in order to select the best possible members for the Council.
Nor do the Council members seem inclined to strengthen the body. On the contrary, the Council made a series of decisions in its 5th session that significantly weakened its ability to objectively advance and advocate human rights or fall far short of the expectations of the United States and most human rights groups.[25]
Weakening the Council
Several decisions adopted by the Council in its June session undermine the ability of the Council to be an effective advocate for advancing basic human rights.
- Universal
Periodic Review. The Council, as required in the General
Assembly resolution creating the body, adopted a "universal
periodic review" of the human rights situation in all U.N. member
states. This step is welcome, but the proposed procedures for the
review are very weak and virtually assure a milquetoast
outcome. The review for every country, whether it is Sweden or
Sudan, is limited to three hours. The review will be a country-led
process in which the "country under review shall be fully involved
in the outcome" and requires the review to "take into account
the level of development and specificities of countries."[26]
Input from non-governmental organizations will be minimal.
Moreover, reviews will occur every four years-regardless of
circumstances in the country-and only after exhausting "all efforts
to encourage a State to cooperate with the UPR [Universal Periodic
Review] mechanism" would the Council "address, as appropriate,
cases of persistent non-cooperation with the mechanism."[27] In
other words, a genocide or massive political crackdown could occur
in Sudan, China, Venezuela, or some other country and the Council
could wait four years or more before examining whether a
country has addressed the human rights concerns raised during the
review.
- Independent
Experts. The Council decided to maintain the system of
independent experts charged with thematic human rights issues, such
as freedom of opinion and expression, torture, and the right to
food, but weakened their ability to investigate and report their
findings. Under the new procedures, a committee appointed by
the HRC will appoint these experts from a roster of "qualified"
candidates. This process increases opportunities for the
Council to directly pressure and influence the experts.
- New Code of
Conduct. Moreover, the experts will be subject to a new Code of
Conduct designed to restrict the independence of the human rights
experts and the sources for their reports. For instance, experts
are required to "show restraint, moderation and discretion" when
implementing their mandate, avoid using "unfounded or politically
motivated" communications or "abusive" language, and not rely
on "reports disseminated by mass media" or non-governmental
organizations or persons unless they are the "victim of
violations…and claiming to have direct or reliable knowledge
of those violations substantiated by clear information."[28]
These restrictions offer ample opportunities for countries to
dispute, block, and otherwise criticize reports by experts.
- Country-Specific Experts. A
majority of the Council sought to eliminate all experts focused on
investigating human rights abuses in specific countries. The effort
failed when European countries threatened to walk out. However, the
Council did eliminate the experts focused on Belarus and Cuba,
despite extensive evidence of ongoing violations. The Council chose
to maintain experts for Burma, Burundi, Cambodia, the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Liberia, North Korea,
Somalia, and Sudan, but many countries plainly plan to eliminate
them in the near future through a "review" process. As with the
thematic experts, the country experts will also have to abide by
the Code of Conduct and will be selected by the committee appointed
by the Council.
- Israel. In a disappointing repetition of one of the Commission's most egregious discriminatory practices, the Council voted to keep Israel as the sole country assigned a permanent expert charged with investigating the "the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967."[29] While it sounds as if this mandate might cover possible human rights abuses by Palestinians and Israelis in the territory, this is not the case. John Dugard, the special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory, said "it was understood that his mandate was limited to investigate human rights violations by Israelis and not by Palestinians."[30] Moreover, the mandate is one-sided and presumes Israel's guilt through language on the duration of this mandate, which extends "until the end of the occupation."[31] Unsatisfied with the efforts to condemn Israel in earlier sessions or with the successful effort to permanently install a blatantly discriminatory mandate focused solely on Israel, the Council passed an additional two resolutions condemning Israel in June.[32]
As summarized by the U.S. Department of State, these institution-building procedures are "seriously flawed" and will make the many problems of the Council "even worse, by terminating the mandates of the U.N. Rapporteurs on the Governments of Cuba and Belarus, two of the world's most active perpetrators of serious human rights violations, and singling out Israel as the only country subject to a permanent agenda item."[33]
Should the U.S. Join the Council?
Some have suggested that the performance of the Council would be improved if the U.S. had been a member of the Council or could be improved if the U.S. sought a seat on the Council in the future. This is very unlikely. Winning a seat on the Council would not necessarily give the U.S. greater voice or influence. Any U.N. member state can comment on and speak to issues before the Council, and the U.S. has frequently expressed its support of or opposition to various resolutions and decisions.
Because membership is based on geographic representation, even if the U.S. won a seat on the Council, it would simply displace one of the seven countries representing the Western Europe and Other States region, which already vote largely as the U.S. would vote. In numerous votes over the past year, the Council has adopted resolutions over the objection of 11 or 12 Western nations.[34] U.S. membership on the Council would not change this situation. The gain from a U.S. vote on the Council would be marginal at best.
Indeed, the U.S. experience over the past year would likely mirror that of Canada. Over the past year, Canada has assumed the traditional U.S. role of raising controversial resolutions and demanding votes. Canada's admirable actions have not been successful. On the contrary, they have resulted in retaliation and-in one remarkable instance- blatant and willful distortion of the record when the HRC declared that the new procedures were adopted by consensus despite Canada's insistence that it never gave its consent or even received a copy of the resolution text. Bizarrely, the Council voted 46 to 1 that Canada had indeed agreed to the consensus.[35] As noted by the U.S., the procedural maneuvers to obtain consensus on the resolution violated both the spirit and letter of the rules of the Council:
We are concerned about the procedural irregularities employed last night denying Council members the opportunity to vote on this agenda. The Human Rights Council was intended to be the world's leading human rights protection mechanism. Its proceedings should be a model of fairness and transparency. Instead, in the interest of political expediency, procedural irregularities denied members the right to an up or down vote on principled human rights concerns-a right guaranteed by the rules of the institution.[36]
There is no reason to expect that the U.S. would be treated differently than Canada by the human rights abusers that have successfully used the Council to undermine human rights rather than protect them.
Conclusion
Hopes that the Human Rights Council would rectify the poor record of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in holding human rights abusers to account have proven illusory. The Council ultimately reflects the quality of its membership. The General Assembly simply did not incorporate the protections and standards for membership that would have led to a more effective body. Predictably, human rights abusers are running the Council agenda in the same manner they did with the Commission.
The U.S. should not be satisfied with the status quo. Congress and the Bush Administration should continue their efforts to improve the HRC's membership, procedures, mechanisms, and institutions. However, we must also be realistic in recognizing that most members of the General Assembly and the Council do not want an effective Council, and that America's best efforts will likely fall short.
As a result, the U.S. should refuse to lend the Council the credibility of U.S. membership or the symbolic support of U.S. contributions until such time as the Council takes its responsibilities seriously by censuring major human rights abusers, exposing their reprehensible actions to public scrutiny, and eschewing its disproportionate focus on Israel.[37]
Brett Schaefer is Jay Kingham Fellow in International Regulatory Affairs in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. These remarks were delivered July 26, 2007, before the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on International Operations and Organizations, Democracy, and Human Rights.