In recent months, according to human rights groups, Syria's security forces have used live ammunition to put down peaceful, unarmed demonstrations, killing more than 100 people, while detaining at least 516 protesters, including more than 250 who are still being held incommunicado.

So, what better time to mount a campaign to become a member of the U.N. Human Rights Council, right?

In January, the U.N.'s Asia Group endorsed a slate of four candidates -- Syria, India, Indonesia, and the Philippines -- to fill four open seats on the U.N.'s premier human rights body. The agreement ensured that all four will get voted onto the 47-nation rights body based in Geneva, Switzerland.

This week, a group of more than 30 Asian, African, and Western human rights organizations have launched a campaign aimed at embarrassing the Asia Group into ditching Syria, or at least changing its practice of presenting preordained slates of candidates. Otherwise, they are hoping that Syria will withdraw its candidacy to avoid drawing undue attention to its repressive practices at home.

"Since the Asia Group's decision was taken in January, security forces in Syria have responded to largely peaceful protests with lethal force, including live ammunition," a group of activists wrote in a letter that was delivered on Tuesday to members of the Asia Group. "Given the significant deterioration in the human rights situation in Syria, we urge the Asia Group to reconsider its slate for the May 20 election."

The leaders of three Syrian rights groups, including Razan Zaitouneh, the editor of the Syrian Human Rights Information Link, and Radeef Mustapha, the president of the board of the Kurdish Committee for Human Rights in Syria, signed the letter. It was also signed by well-known Western rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, and organizations from Egypt, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Thailand.

"Instead of propping up an abusive regime blind to the winds of change sweeping the region, the members of the Asian group should side with the hundreds of peaceful protestors who have been killed, wounded or arbitrarily detained by the Syrian security forces in recent weeks," Radwan Ziadeh, the U.S.-based director of the Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies, said in a statement.

"Syria shouldn't be rewarded by the Asia group for using the same appalling tactics that led to Libya's unanimous suspension from the council," added Hossam Bahgat, executive director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights.

In the past, human rights groups and Western countries have successfully derailed the candidacies of flagrant rights abusers, including Belarus and Iran. But a number of countries with poor rights records, including China, Cuba, Russia, and Saudi Arabia still have seats on the council. Libya got onto the committee last year, but on March 1 its membership was suspended -- the first time a member state has had its membership suspended.

Last week, Iran's parliament blasted the U.N. rights council for serving the interests of the United States and other big powers. "The U.N. Human Rights Council is a toy in the hands of great powers to make secret deals with its members," according to a statement by the Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee.

The parliamentary committee urged the council to address the killing of civilians in U.S.-backed countries like Yemen and Bahrain, where a Sunni Muslim monarchy has cracked down violently against peaceful, mostly Shiite, demonstrators. It also appealed for greater scrutiny of "how the U.S. supports the killing of innocent people and carries out torture in Guantanamo and its secret prisons in Europe."

The ability of countries like Syria and Libya to get on the council has again drawn attention to one of the most frustrating traditions at the U.N. -- the practice of allowing regional groupings at the U.N. to determine groups of nominees among themselves, thereby granting even the most abominable countries the ability to secure seats on the U.N.'s various intergovernmental bodies. But there has been little pressure to alter the tradition, even from the United States -- indeed, Washington itself got onto the human rights council two years ago as part of a slate of Western candidates.

 

SEN C

10:00 PM ET

April 6, 2011

UN -Dictators Wanted!

Freedomhouse Report on 'Worst of the Worst'-2010' said the world has taken a U-turn on Human Rights in the last 30 years.
Syria, Libya, Sri Lanka, Iran etc. and Human Rights Council?

Libyan Gaddhafi calls his people members of Al-Qaeda to unleash carnage.
UN ex-spokesman Gordon Weiss had to leave his 14-year job to say upto 40,000 were killed in the final days of massacre in Sri Lanka.

At least, Libyan people have the media on their side.
UN under Ban Ki-Moon is propping up dictators and employing War Criminals and mafiia staff.

 

JBROCKLE

11:14 AM ET

April 7, 2011

UNHRC

Such a credible organisation!

 

JAYDEE001

12:27 PM ET

April 7, 2011

They cannot be serious.

By all that is right, this cannot be allowed to stand.

From the Resolution adopted by the UN General Assembly on April 2, 2006, in part:

"Reaffirming also the Universal Declaration of Human Rights1 and the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action,2 and recalling the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,3 the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights3 and other human rights instruments,
Reaffirming further that all human rights are universal, indivisible,
interrelated, interdependent and mutually reinforcing, and that all human rights must be treated in a fair and equal manner, on the same footing and with the same emphasis,
Reaffirming that, while the significance of national and regional particularities and various historical, cultural and religious backgrounds must be borne in mind, all States, regardless of their political, economic and cultural systems, have the duty to promote and protect all human rights and fundamental freedoms,
Emphasizing the responsibilities of all States, in conformity with the Charter,
to respect human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, without distinction of any kind as to race, colour, sex, language or religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status,"

Now, granted that many nations who are already signatories to the UN Charter have failed to live up to these affirmations, how can any self-respecting organization that pledges to support and address violations of human rights authorize membership of nations that habitually ignore those rights.

 

ZORRO

4:12 PM ET

April 7, 2011

Realism 101

UNHRC with only western powers could do nothing. UNHRC with shady characters might achieve slightly more than nothing.
Considering that I assume the Asia group includes the 'stans I don't think their pick was bad, but as good as possible. That Saudi Arabia is on the council seems worse than Syria.

 

JACOB BLUES

5:44 PM ET

April 7, 2011

Right,

And in the history of the UNHRC and its predecessor, there is what evidence to base this on?

Reality is, the UN as the fountain of morality and ethics is essentially bankrupt.

 

REACTOR67

12:18 PM ET

April 26, 2011

Great

Such a credible organisation indeed! Well done for highlighting the work done on exposing them, this blog shows a rare breed of courage.
art

 

Longtime Washington Post correspondent Colum Lynch reports on all things United Nations for Turtle Bay.

Read More