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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

The wrongs of a rights council

February 15, 2013 13:58
3 min read

Last month, a joyous event, unprecedented in the history of the UN, took place in Geneva. Under what is known as the “Universal Periodic Review”, every UN member state has agreed to submit itself to a five-yearly inquisition by the UN’s Human Rights Council (HRC). On January 29, it was Israel’s turn. The government of Israel did not refuse to undergo a review, nor did it formally ask for a postponement. It simply indicated that it intended to delay its participation. But even this small gesture caused an immediate fluttering in the diplomatic dovecotes.

Feverish efforts — notably by the USA — are now being made behind the scenes to persuade Israel to change its mind. If the Israeli government has an ounce of self respect it will rebuff these entreaties and tell the HRC exactly where to go with its UPR and what to do with it when it gets there.

Some frankly ludicrous arguments are being used to get Israel to change its mind. But before I deal with these I need to paint the wider picture within which Israel’s action needs to be set. The HRC was established in 2006 as the successor body to the Human Rights Commission, a spiteful and time-wasting conclave composed of representatives of 53 states, many with poor-to-appalling human rights records. The HRC consists of representatives of only 47 states but, as successor to the commission, it has demonstrated in ample measure that it is nothing more than a spiteful and time-wasting conclave of states, many of which boast poor-to-appalling human-rights records.

Current members include such beacons of humanity and loving-kindness as Saudi Arabia (public executions; oppression of women and gays); Kyrgyzstan (systematic state-sponsored oppression of the Uzbek minority); and the People’s Republic of China (suppression of freedom of expression; secret trials). That the duly appointed representatives of such regimes should be afforded the privilege of sitting in judgment on liberal democracies strikes me as perverse — even wicked.