Beijing calls the shots in UN Human Rights Council panel

How do you punish a country which doesnt regret unleashing a global pandemic, takes pride in the repression of religious
Beijing calls the shots in UN Human Rights Council panel
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NEW DELHI: How do you punish a country which doesnt regret unleashing a global pandemic, takes pride in the repression of religious and ethnic minorities at home, and is disturbing world peace with its nefarious expansionist designs? You give it the charge of a UN human rights panel.

How do you reward someone who has ignored a country's brutalities, gross abuses of human rights and instead praised its aggressive expansionist projects? You appoint the person to monitor free speech in the world.

Shocking but true-this is exactly what the United Nations has done in the past few months while the world has been busy tackling a pandemic.

Quietly and shrewdly, China has climbed to the top of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) panel; it is now calling the shots, including picking the world body's human rights investigators.

Jiang Duan, Minister at the Permanent Mission of China, to the Human Rights Council's Consultative Group from April 1, 2020, to March 31, 2021, had earlier this year justified the repression of Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang.

A few weeks after being elected to the council, Jiang was appointed as the head of the five-nation panel which appoints independent human rights experts under the special procedure of the UNHRC.

"Allowing China's oppressive and inhumane regime to choose the world investigators on freedom of speech, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearances is like making a pyromaniac into the town fire chief.

"It's absurd and immoral for the UN to allow China's oppressive government a key role in selecting officials who shape international human rights standards and report on violations worldwide," Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, a non-governmental human rights organization based in Geneva that closely monitors the 47-nation UN Human Rights Council, and a leader in speaking out at the UN for victims in China, had said immediately after Jiang's appointment.

The UN Special Procedures had been one of the few elements of the UN's human rights machinery that has been substantially raising the Uyghur crisis and holding China accountable for its crimes against humanity. Quite obviously, the disappointment in the Uyghur community was also on the expected lines.

"We have already been witnessing China's growing influence and attempts to undermine human rights in the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. Despite the fact that China has been committing crimes against humanity against Uyghurs for over three years, the UN Human Rights Council has not been able to debate this topic or take any meaningful action.

"China, along with a group of authoritarian states have been targeting the human rights council, forming a coalition to collectively attack human rights. The Chinese government is consistently acting against the founding principles of the UN and is wielding its power and influence to undermine human rights and silence criticism of its human rights record," commented Dolkun Isa, President of the World Uyghur Congress (WUC).

However, the criticism has hardly bothered China. It continues to influence the selection of UN human rights mandate-holders known as special procedures, who investigate, monitor, and publicly report on either specific country situations, or on thematic issues in all parts of the world, such as freedom of speech and religion.

Last week, China picked Bangladesh-born attorney Irene Khan, a former secretary general of Amnesty International, as the UNHRC spokesperson on free speech. (IANS)

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