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January 17, 2006
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Tuesday
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Zilhaj 16, 1426
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US deflects criticism over human rights council
By Colum Lynch
UNITED NATIONS: The Bush administration is defending itself against criticism that it has not followed through on promises to lead a vigorous campaign at the United Nations to establish an effective new human rights council to condemn rights abusers.
For months, human rights advocates have faulted the administration for leading a lacklustre diplomatic effort, noting that it has assigned a mid-level representative to lead the talks in New York while other governments sent their top UN ambassadors.
They also expressed concern that John Bolton, the US ambassador to the United Nations, has been unduly fatalistic about prospects for success, indicating he is prepared to abandon the effort if he cannot overcome opposition to a credible council.
Kenneth Roth, executive director of the New York-based Human Rights Watch, said: “Frankly, my main critique of US policy at this stage has been that the United States has been mainly AWOL, that its presence during the negotiations has been low level.” Roth said he shares Bolton’s assessment that the United States “shouldn’t settle for window dressing. Where I differ with him insofar as that reflects defeatism because I don’t accept that we can’t emerge from these negotiations without a significantly improved council.”
The Bush administration responded last week with a new high-level push in New York and foreign capitals to rally support for a strong council to replace the Human Rights Commission, whose credibility has suffered because of the membership of noted rights abusers, including Zimbabwe and Sudan. A six-month stretch of negotiations on the new council resumed on Wednesday.
Senior administration officials have met rights groups to assure them that it is a priority to create a new council before the commission holds its annual meeting in March in Geneva. They have assured the groups that Bolton and Deputy Ambassador Alejandro Wolff will direct the US diplomacy.
“The United States remains deeply committed to working cooperatively with other delegations to ensure a credible Human Rights Council is established, one true to its designated mandate,” Bolton told foreign delegates early last week. “The changes cannot, however, be solely cosmetic, and the United States will not support artificial changes. Simply to replace the ‘commission’ with the word ‘council’ after ‘human rights’ would be a grave disservice to us all — and it is not something the United States will support.”
Until recently, Bolton’s priority at the United Nations has been restructuring the organization’s bureaucracy to upgrade its management and combat corruption. Negotiations on the human rights council had been left to Mark Lagon, the US deputy assistant secretary of state for international organization affairs. William Lucas, his deputy, managed day-to-day talks through a critical stage of negotiations last month.
Some delegates said they interpreted Bolton’s absence from the talks as a signal that the issue is low on Washington’s priority list. “I can’t remember a meeting where Ambassador Bolton participated,” said Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo, the South African co-chairman of the council negotiations.
Bolton and other senior administration officials insist there has been high-level attention to the rights council. Kristen Silverberg, the US assistant secretary of state for international affairs, said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her top lieutenants have repeatedly underscored the US commitment to a human rights council. —Dawn/Washington Post News Service
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