GENEVA, March 22 - The UN’s top human rights body condemned Israel
today in five separate resolutions, the same amount devoted to the
rest of the world combined. One farcical text, written by Syria,
which is now slaughtering its own people, found Israel guilty of
major violations in the Golan heights. Another created a “fact-
finding mission” into the settlements, which, like the notorious
Goldstone inquiry, is expected to generate a massive international
legal, political and media campaign, deflecting attention from abuses
committed by the resolution’s sponsors—the Arab and Islamic blocs
including Iran, Syria and the Palestinians—and onto Israel. For more
on today’s consequential vote,
CLICK HERE.
In the debate leading up to today’s assault on Israel, held under the
UN Human Rights Council’s permanent agenda item on alleged Israeli
violations, Iran, Syria, Sudan and other serial rights abusers
accused Israel of violating international law and basic human rights.
UN Watch’s Hillel Neuer took the floor to respond.
CLICK HERE FOR VIDEO.
Other developments:
• Worst Abusers Win ‘Get-Out-of-Jail-Free’ Card: The UN council today
refused to adopt a single resolution for victims of human rights
abuses in more than 180 countries. The council failed to act even
though it had in its hands ready-to-go resolutions—formally submitted
last week by UN Watch’s summit of dissidents and 20 human rights
groups—concerning gross and systematic violations committed by China,
Cuba, Russia, and Saudi Arabia, all of whom happen to be council
members, as well as by Venezuela, Vietnam and Zimbabwe. With all the
promised reforms of its 2006 facelift, the council remains, as Kofi
Annan said of its predecessor, selective, politicized and a stain on
the reputation of the UN itself.
• Castro’s Communist Cuba Takes the Lead: Three of today’s adopted
resolutions were sponsored by Castro’s Communist Cuba. One requires
the UN to hire professional staff according to “geographic balance”
instead of merit. The US and EU said the move threatened basic
standards of competence, qualifications and efficiency. Another Cuban-
sponsored text promotes the doctrine of “cultural rights,” often used
at the UN by many Islamic, Communist and African governments to evade
respecting their citizens’ universal human rights, and to justify the
killing of gays in Iran, the execution of Christians for blasphemy in
Pakistan, and the jailing of dissidents in China, Cuba and Zimbabwe.
• Handful of Positive Resolutions: The council did manage to adopt a
handful of welcome resolutions. As every year, pariah state North
Korea was condemned, with only China, Russia and Cuba taking the
floor to dissociate themselves from the consensus resolution. Thanks
to vigorous US diplomacy, the investigator on Iran, who recently
produced a strong report, was renewed for one year, and there was a
much-belated resolution calling on Sri Lanka to provide
accountability for its 2009 killing of an estimated 40,000 civilians
in its war with the Tamils. For texts of all resolutions and voting
results, click here.
Sadly, however, it was a telling comment on the grossly politicized
nature of the council that the Iran resolution could only muster a
plurality of 22 out of 47 votes, even though the text, in contrast
with solid resolutions passed annually by the General Assembly,
carefully held back from condemning or even naming a single human
rights violation by the Tehran regime.
Similarly, the price of winning support for the Sri Lanka draft
included the omission of any condemnation of the government for war
crimes, or any reference to the Secretary-General’s strong UN report
on the 2009 atrocities; and then, at the very last minute, the
further watering-down of the text to give Sri Lanka a veto on whether
the UN can provide it with so much as “advice” and “technical
assistance.” Given the composition of the council, most agreed this
was nevertheless the best that could be achieved, and was a marked
improvement from its 2009 resolution that praised Sri Lanka
for “promoting and protecting human rights.”