The name may have changed, but the venom still spews forth
Why Does the UN Human Rights Council Single Out
Special to Globe and Mail (
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This discriminatory treatment is not only prejudicial to
The week began with Archbishop
I suspect the appreciation was for the man as much as anything else, because the mandate that authorized the mission was a sham. It made a mockery of the council's own founding principles and procedures. It was a mission that should never have been.
Accordingly, when I addressed the council that same morning, I made public for the first time that I had been invited by the council president to join the mission last November, but declined to do so.
I explained to the council that one might have thought I would welcome the opportunity to serve under a UN human-rights mandate.
Regrettably, though, I could not accept the mandate because its terms of reference made a mockery of Kofi Annan's vision for the new council and its founding principles of universality, equality and fairness.
First, as a law professor and international lawyer, I could not accept a mandate to hear only one side of a dispute. The terms of reference deliberately ignored the Palestinian rocket attacks on the Israeli city of
The entrance to the McGill University Faculty of Law, where I am a professor, is engraved with the words "audi alteram partem" (hear both sides). How could one participate in a mandate that violated this bedrock principle of the rule of law that denied a member state the right to a fair hearing and fundamental due process?
Second, the mandate violated the presumption of innocence. The resolution establishing this fact-finding mission began by condemning "the Israeli willful killing of Palestinian civilians." The 19 Palestinian dead were a tragedy. But how could one participate in a fact-finding mission where the facts and the verdict were determined in advance a kind of Alice in Wonderland inquiry where the conviction was secured and the sentence passed even before the proceeding began?
It is not surprising, therefore, that the council members who most consistently support the human-rights mechanisms of this body, including
Regrettably, this discriminatory and one-sided approach has become not the exception but the norm. Council sessions of the past year reflected not only the same contempt for the rule of law, but the systematic singling-out of a member state for selective and discriminatory treatment, while granting the major violators exculpatory immunity.
Examples abound:
- There have been nine resolutions condemning one member state only (
- The continuing exclusion of one member state (
- The council's discourse, as exemplified in the session just ended, as an endless drumbeat of indictment and incitement against
Indeed, in a world where human rights have emerged as the new secular religion of our time,
And as if this were not enough, the council has now institutionalized forever the
The tragedy in all of this is not only that it fuels the ongoing delegitimization, if not the demonization, of a member state of the United Nations, casting
Rather, the tragedy is that all of this takes place under the protective cover of the UN, with the presumed imprimatur of international law, and the halo banner of human rights.
It is not only one state that is under assault. The bell is tolling for the UN Human Rights Council itself. It is time to sound the alarm and return the council to its founding principles and ideals.
This article appeared in The Globe and Mail on Jun21st 2007http://israelvisit.co.il/cgi-bin/friendly.pl?url=Jun-23-07!J'accuse
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