Video Of The Week - Col. Richard Kemp Blasts U.N.'s Pillay Commission https://tinyurl.com/y398td75
For the full Article from UN Watch go to - https://tinyurl.com/bddbnx86
Nearly half the countries on the UN's top human
rights body—which the U.S. is now seeking to rejoin, and which opens a 3-week
session on Monday, June 21st—are using their membership negatively,
opposing instead of supporting action for victims of arbitrary detention,
torture and other abuses, according to a new report released by UN Watch. UN Watch's scorecard measured all 47 UN Human Rights
Council member states based on their 2020 votes on resolutions concerning
victims in such places as Belarus, Burundi, Eritrea, Iran and Yemen, as well
on resolutions that define human rights concepts. Thirteen countries were rated as having “Destructive”
voting records, including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Libya, Namibia, Nigeria,
Qatar, Senegal and Somalia. Another 10 council members were rated as having “Very
Destructive” records, including Eritrea, Mauritania, Pakistan, the Philippines,
Sudan and Venezuela. When 60 percent of the UN Human Rights Council is
composed of tyrannies and other non-democracies—absurdly, China, Cuba
and Russia this year joined existing members such as Libya, Pakistan and
Venezuela—it's no surprise that so many use their votes to oppose
action against the world’s worst abusers, or to support
counterproductive resolutions that legitimize dictatorships and terrorists. Even worse, most of the world’s worst situations of
widespread abuse never even come to a vote, with major violators of human
rights such as China, Cuba, Egypt, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Zimbabwe
enjoying complete impunity at the UNHRC, escaping any censure or scrutiny in
the form of council resolutions, inquiries or special sessions. Only 24 of the 47 Council
members had mixed or positive records. Twelve countries received a
“Constructive” score: Austria, Brazil, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Japan,
Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, South Korea, Spain, and Ukraine. These
countries contributed constructively to the council’s work between 70% and
89% of the time. Four countries received a
“Very Constructive” score: Australia, Bulgaria, Czech Republic and Marshall
Islands. This means that these countries contributed constructively to the
Council’s work more than 90% of the time by supporting key council actions
that promoted human rights and democracy, and opposing those that were
counterproductive. Eight countries received a
“Mixed" score—Argentina, Armenia. Bahamas, Chile, Fiji, Mexico, Peru,
and Uruguay—meaning that their contribution was positive only some of the
time, and they also supported counterproductive council actions or abstained. According to the UN Watch
scorecard, more than a third of key council resolutions that were adopted
last year were prejudicial and counterproductive. These include two Cuban-led resolutions categorizing
Western sanctions on Syria, Russia, Venezuela and other dictatorships as
human rights violations, a Chinese-sponsored resolution “promoting mutually beneficial
cooperation” which erodes protection of individual rights in
deference to “the priorities set by the states concerned,” and a series of
resolutions on the Arab-Israel conflict, sponsored by Islamic states,
which promote the narrative of Hamas and of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad
regime. |
To SUBSCRIBE or UNSUBSCRIBE the BIG mailing list please
click HERE NEW ,VIEW
OUR WEBSITE WWW.BRITISHISRAELGROUP.WEEBLY.COM
No comments:
Post a Comment