IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Gracen Intelligence UK Cambridge Meeting 4 February, 8:00 p.m.

Gracen Intelligence NYC Meeting, 27 February, will be chaired by Gracen Fellow Alastair Fellows and will feature Mohammad Chehabi on Iranian resistance and Morgaan Sinclair on Saudi prison conditions and the death penalty in Iran.


15 June 2007

Prayer Vigil for Lina Joy

Gracen Intelligence Commentary:
Either there's "no compulsion in religion" or there's not. It is indicative of the turmoil surrounding this apostasy case that while the story has lost impetus in the Western press it is still daily front page news in Malaysia. This prayer service was attended by the Malaysian Consultative Council on Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST), the women’s rights group Women's Action Society (AWAM), and, most poignantly, Sisters in Islam (SIS), whose courage in standing up is incredibly inspiring. The "re-education" in question here is a form of incarceration involving "Manchurian Candidate"—style psychological pressure and mind control, and should thus be considered a form of torture. It is the position of Gracen Intelligence that it violates absolutely every extant human rights convention on this planet as the cruel and unusual punishment it is — and that the government of Malaysia should be sanctioned by the United Nations for crimes against humanity in allowing religious authorities to punish people out of the freedoms of conscience and religion that are their inalienable rights. — Morgaan Sinclair for Gracen Intelligence

06/15/2007 12:55
MALAYSIA

A Hindu Lina Joy, subjected to Islamic “re-education”
Source: http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=9564&size=A

Some civil groups in Malaysia have organised a prayer vigil Revathi: and Indian Hindu who January last was condemned to 180 days of “rehabilitation” in a centre lead by Muslim authorities.

Kuala Lumpur (AsiaNews) – Malaysian civil society is rising against the continued interference of Islamic law in the lives of non Muslim citizens. On June 9 in Kuala Lumpur a night time prayer vigil will be held to draw public attention to the case of Ravathi, a woman of Indian origins who is currently being held in a detention centre after the state refused to recognise her religious status as a Hindu.

Organizers include the Malaysian Consultative Council on Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST) women’s rights groups Women's Action Society (AWAM) and Sisters in Islam (SIS).

Revathi was born to Indian parents who had converted to Islam before her birth. She claims she was raised by her grandmother as a Hindu. She and Suresh were married according to Hindu rites in March 2004. Revathi was advised by the Malacca Islamic Religious Department to make an application at the Malacca Syariah High Court to confirm her status as a Hindu. She did as she was told. However, the Syariah Court ordered her detained in a rehabilitation centre in Ulu Yam, Selangor under Melaka's Syariah criminal laws for 100 days. This detention was extended in Revathi's absence for a further 80 days supposedly because she had not "repented". In the meanwhile, Revathi's Muslim mother obtained a Syariah Court order granting her custody of Revathi and Suresh's 15 month old baby. That order was enforced on Suresh's Hindu family with the assistance of the police. The family is now torn apart - with the mother in detention, the child with the grandparents and the father in limbo without his family.

After the Lina Joy case – the Malay women whose conversion to Christianity was not recognised by the Federal Court, who judged it to be an issue for the “Islamic tribunal” – increasing doubts about the existence of freedom of belief and faith in the country. In fact in multi-racial Malaysia two legislations exist: Islamic and Constitutional, and they are often conflicting. For example Constitutional law grants freedom of religion, while Islamic law prohibits conversion from Islam. Organizers of the prayer vigil Revathi, seek to underline that “Federal law supremacy over Sharia needs to be reaffirmed”.

14 June 2007

Ebadi Can't See Iranian-American Client

Iran censorship 'getting worse'

Shirin Ebadi
Ms Ebadi says she has not been allowed to see her client
Iranian Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi has said censorship in her country is getting much worse.
_____________________________________

Ms Ebadi, a human rights lawyer, said the government was trying to prevent information about what is happening there reaching the outside world.

The recent arrest of four Iranian-Americans for spying was part of that trend, she told the BBC.

Ms Ebadi said she was being prevented from representing one of those detained, academic Haleh Esfandiari.

She said Mrs Esfandiari had requested representation in a phone call, but Iran's judiciary denied it.

She said has not been allowed to see her client, who is being held in solitary confinement, and has not been given details of the case.

"On the basis of Iranian law, none can accuse anyone else before he or she appears in court," Ms Ebadi told the BBC.

She added that the ministry of intelligence's repeated description of her client as a spy was "absolutely illegal".

National sovereignty

Ms Ebadi said the government's attitude to foreigners was also deteriorating.

"Censorship has got much worse recently... Iran's government doesn't like its domestic affairs and events inside the country to be reflected in the outside world," Ms Ebadi said.

When governments are threatened... they suppress freedom-loving figures
Shirin Ebadi

Ms Ebadi also criticised the West, saying talk of military strikes on Iran had given Teheran an excuse to suppress its people on the grounds of national defence.

"Usually when governments are threatened by foreign forces, they suppress freedom-loving figures by pretending to defend national sovereignty," she said.

"And this is true in Iran now."

Ms Esfandiari is director of the Middle East programme at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

Also being detained are Kian Tajbakhsh, an urban planning consultant with the Open Society Institute and Ali Shakeri, a founding board member of the Center for Citizen Peacebuilding at the University of California in Irvine.

Parnaz Azima, a journalist who works for the US-funded Radio Farda, has been released but prevented from leaving the country.

Gaza Lurches to Islamic State

From
June 14, 2007

Gaza lurches towards Islamist mini-state


A new, Islamist mini-state was emerging in the Gaza Strip yesterday, as victorious Hamas forces surrounded and blew up their secular rivals’ last strongholds in bitter fighting that threw the entire future of the Middle East peace process into doubt.

Supporters of the Fatah movement fled to Egypt or surrendered as Hamas leaders predicted that they would control the entire coastal strip by the end of the week.

European Union chiefs said that the deployment of an international force should be urgently considered to curb the bloodshed.

In Gaza, Hamas strengthened its grip as its fighters surrounded die-hard Fatah supporters in isolated, last-stand strongholds. In Khan Younis in the south, Hamas guerrillas tunnelled under a Fatah security base and blew it up with its defenders still inside. Those refusing to give up in other besieged bastions were given two days to surrender.

”This is a victory for Islam and I hope we will build our Islamic state,” said Abu Qatada, a masked 22-year-old Hamas fighter, standing outside the smouldering ruin of the Fatah security base. “We must now complete the job,” he said.

In a symbolic moment, a large crowd of Gaza civilians demonstrating for an end to the internecine fighting came under fire from unidentified attackers who killed at least two marchers.

Political leaders of Fatah were also being hunted, and several hundred members of a Fatah-affiliated clan gave themselves up to Hamas militiamen after a deadly ambush. Fifty Fatah policemen crossed the border with Egypt and gave up their weapons to Egyptian troops after their positions came under Hamas rocket attacks.

“The situation is very, very bad,” Maher Mekhdad, a high-ranking Fatah official in Gaza, told The Times by mobile phone after his well-defended house was overrun by Hamas gunmen. “Hamas is going for total control of all the Gaza Strip. They want to push us into oblivion.”

Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian President and leader of Fatah, lamented the “madness” that was unfolding. At least 33 people were killed yesterday, bringing the toll since Saturday to 81 as the violence escalates into what many Palestinians see as all-out civil war in Gaza.

The United Nations said that it would scale back its operations in Gaza after two of its Palestinian employees were killed and two others seriously wounded in crossfire.

Benni Eilon, an extreme right-wing member of the Israeli parliament, said that the fighting would put paid to Palestinian plans for an independent state. “The Fatah is diminishing in front of our eyes, and a group of gangsters is taking over. ”



Taliban Militants Drain Life from Pakistani City

International Herald Tribune

Pro-Taliban militants gain ground, drain life from once prosperous Pakistani city

TANK, Pakistan: Pro-Taliban militants have transformed a once-bustling community in northwestern Pakistan into a desolate city under siege.

After militant raids on government buildings, businesses and a school, Tank's dusty streets and bazaars are largely empty and gunfire rings out at night. A tribal elder and opposition politician estimates that one-third of residents have fled to other areas.

"The government has lost its writ in Tank," said Sardar Ahmed Gul, who keeps a loaded Chinese-made pistol at hand. "Every evening there is shooting and people cannot go out."

The government's crumbling authority over towns like Tank in the North West Frontier Province suggests that President Gen. Pervez Musharraf is failing to rein in extremism as Islamic militants broaden their influence beyond the lawless regions that border Afghanistan.

It also raises questions about the prospects of success for Washington's anti-terrorism efforts in the region, where al-Qaida leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri are believed to be hiding.

Observers blame the uptick in violence in Tank, about 110 kilometers (70 miles) from the Afghan border, on fighters filtering in from South Waziristan, a militant stronghold on the frontier where the government has little control.

On March 28, scores of militants attacked government buildings and businesses for several hours, killing one soldier and kidnapping a high school principal who had tried to stop them from recruiting students. He was freed, but the violence persisted — last month, about 100 militants attacked a government official's house, killing 13 people.

Pakistan's army also has come under attack; three bombings since January have killed at least six soldiers.

Now, Tank is becoming a virtual no-go zone, even for its 150,000 residents, and the fear is that it and other nearby districts are slipping into the orbit of Islamic fundamentalists who have issued Taliban-style social edicts and set up their own courts in the tribal areas.

Extremists have warned barbers not to shave customers' beards and bombed shops selling Western music or films.

At a meeting of his National Security Council last week, Musharraf told authorities that "the militants must be taken head on, security of vital places be beefed up and activities of suspected elements be strictly monitored."

He pledged to provide the provincial government with more police, vehicles and equipment. But there are doubts about both his willingness and ability to clamp down on the militants.

Musharraf relies heavily on Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, a religious party that leads the provincial government and helped secure the release of the abducted principal, to mediate with militant groups in the region.

Samina Ahmed, a South Asia expert at the International Crisis Group think tank, views Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam as a "political front" for the militants. The party shies away from criticizing the militants' activities in Tank, Ahmed said, blaming the government instead for stirring up a hornets' nest by launching counter-terrorist operations in the area at Washington's behest.

"'Talibanization' is a term created by the U.S. and the West to blame and defame Muslims and Pashtuns," said Maulana Saleh Shah, a Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam lawmaker in Tank. "Anywhere something happens against their agenda they label it as Taliban."

However, others suspect that the party is losing control of hardcore extremists.

"There is a serious rift between these militants and the JUI," said Rahimullah Yousafzai, a Pakistani reporter and expert on the region. "Some of them had links with the JUI in the past, then they were radicalized and they want the JUI to be more radical, too."

Asfandyar Wali, head of the secular Awami National Party which competes with the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam for the loyalty of ethnic Pashtuns, accused Musharraf of deliberately allowing the violence. That way, he said, Musharraf can send a message to his foreign backers that "if I am not here, these are the sort of people who will rule nuclear-armed Pakistan."

Shopkeepers in Tank are merely worried about their safety.

"No one wants put his life at risk in such an uncertain situation," said Qibla Khan, who supports a family of 10 by selling fruit and vegetables. "We all are worried about our and our kids future. We cannot live in such a constant state of fear and worry."

___

Stephen Graham reported on this story from Islamabad, Riaz Khan from Tank.



Iranian Rapist / Murderer Executed


Gracen Intelligence Commentary
:
In a country that routinely exonerates murderers who claim their religion or their honor has been offended — that frees perpetrators of crimes against women on trumped-up charges of adultery — that turns a blind eye to abuses of the Baha'i, Jews, Christians and all others of non-Muslim faith, this is an encouraging, if extremely odd, turn of events. Ebadi, who is anti-death penalty under normal circumstances, has either changed position, or there is something about this family of such importance that the general Iranian population is being warned not to mess with their property. It is on behalf of the woman's family — not the woman's personhood — that this sentence was handed down and carried out. The victim is still, on balance, property, despite being dead. At the same time, there's perhaps another reason: if the culture of Iran invokes the death penalty by stoning on grounds of unproved adultery, extra-judicial (and then absolved) murders of non-Muslims, and so-called "honor" killings based on the bruised psychosexual pride of a man who thinks he owns a woman, we can only applaud this execution on the grounds of equal protection under the law. Until Iran rids itself of its egregious abuses of human rights, particular those of the most vulnerable — the women, the children, the Baha'i and other non-Muslims — it can at least apply equally laws against the taking of human life. It is the position of Gracen Intelligence that it opposes the death penalty, but only under the condition that a nation opposes the death penalty for all — not selectively applying it to women and minorities in judicial and extrajudicial fashion, and then writing laws and installing judges that give a privileged sector of the society (in this case the Mullahs and Muslim men) the right to kill out of ego or bigotry and then go free. Given Ebadi's record on this issue, our supposition is that this may be the point that she, as a lawyer and judge, is actually making. — Morgaan Sinclair for Gracen Intelligence


IRAN: Death Penalty Request by Nobel Laureate Attorney Sparks Criticism



Source: http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level_English.php?cat=Politics&loid=8.0.425347667&par=0

Tehran, 13 June (AKI) - The news that a young man has been executed in Tehran for raping and killing a woman has been met with surprise and criticism by progressive Iranians not because of the sentence - Iran ranks second after China for the number of executions carried out - but because the attorney who reportedly demanded capital punishment on behalf of the victim's family is Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi, an anti-death penalty campaigner. Mohammed Safar was hanged a few days ago at Tehran's Evin prison.

Iranian blogs, mostly those of women's rights activists, have harshly condemned Ebadi.

"Someone like her who is a campaigner for peace and justice cannot support the request for the death penalty asked by the family's victim," wrote on her blog women's rights activist Assieh Amini.

Ebadi's office in Tehran contacted by Adnkronos International (AKI) refused to comment the reports.

A graduate of Tehran University, Shirin Ebadi, 60, was the first female judge in her country, serving as president of the Tehran city court, from 1975.

However, after the 1979 Islamic revolution she was forced to resign when it was decided that women were not suitable for such posts.

Ebadi then established a law practice, taking on politically sensitive cases many Iranian lawyers were afraid to touch.

She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 for her efforts to stop among other things political imprisonment, gender discrimination and the death penalty in Iran.

UN Addresses Serbia on Roma Women's Rights

__________________________________________

UN Women’s Rights Committee Calls on Serbia to Address Discrimination against Romani Women


13 June 2007, Budapest, Belgrade: The European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC), in partnership with the Serbian non-governmental organisations Bibija, Eureka, and Women’s Space, today welcomed the concluding comments of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) in their review of Serbia’s compliance with the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. CEDAW’s comments address Serbia’s initial report on its progress in eliminating sex and gender discrimination since becoming party to the Convention in 2006. The ERRC, Bibija, Eureka and Women’s Space had previously submitted a report to the Committee bringing attention to the critical situation for Romani women in Serbia.

CEDAW’s comments highlighted the particularly vulnerable position of Romani women in Serbian society, who face multifarious barriers to education, political representation, and legal justice due to the combination of sexual and racial discrimination. The Committee requested that Serbia take immediate action in a number of areas:

Domestic violence
The Committee cautioned that admission criteria for safe houses may represent “de facto discrimination against Roma women threatened by domestic violence.” It urged Serbia to “review and monitor the application of admission criteria used by safe houses for victims of domestic violence in order to ensure that these do not exclude Roma women.”

Education
Questioning the “lack of current sex-disaggregated data and information in regard to education,” the Committee showed particular concern in regards to “Roma women and girls and other marginalized groups,” amongst whom rates of literacy and education are alarmingly high. It recommended that “special attention be paid to achieving equal access [to education] for marginalized groups of women and girl, in particular of the Roma minority…the Committee also recommends that literacy and vocation programmes be provided to Roma women, in particular those who are elderly and illiterate.”

Health care

The Committee noted concern about “the limited access to adequate health-care services for women, especially for women in rural areas and Roma women,” and called on Serbia to “increase its efforts to improve the availability of sexual and reproductive health services, including family planning.” It extended this concern to the area of early marriage, “particularly within the Roma population,” due to the “negative effects of early marriage on women’s enjoyment of their human rights, especially their rights to health and education,” and as such urged Serbia “to enforce the legal minimum age of marriage, which is set at 18.”

ERRC, Bibija, Eureka, and Women’s Space are pleased that the Committee included such detailed recommendations to the Serbian government to improve the dire situation of Romani women, and they urge Serbia to take immediate, strong action to implement the Committee’s recommendations.

Wahhabism Spreading in Russia

14 June 2007, 10:01

Prominent Islamic researcher warns against Wahhabism replacing traditional Islam throughout Russia

Moscow, June 13, Interfax - Ideas of Islamist extremism and intolerance towards other faiths are spreading today in many Russian regions, Islamic researcher Roman Silantyev maintains.

'There is a process of substituting Islam 'modernized' in the spirit Wahhabism for traditional Islam underway in Russia today. People often follow the Wahhabi ideology in the belief that what they confess is traditional Islam', Silantyev said in an interview with the Nashe Vremya weekly.

In the researcher's estimation, if before there were large Wahhabi enclaves in Dagestan, Chechnya and Karachayevo-Cherkessia, now 'there is an apparent spread of the Wahhabi infection from Chechnya to the whole of North Caucasus and even to the Russian population in the Stavropol region'.

Besides, he added, 'Wahhabi pestholes' have gradually appeared in cities and areas with a traditional Islamic minorities, such as Sakhalin, Orenburg region, Yamalo-Nenets cities, St. Petersburg, Tomsk, Omsk, Chita and Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.

'Whole Wahhabi villages have appeared in Mordovia and the Penza region. In the Olonets region in Karelia they (Wahhabis - IF) tried to lay Orthodox parishes under tribute', the expert maintains.

The present Islamic community in Russia, in his view, is 'in a state of the gravest crisis' and the ways out of it have not yet been found. The Russian umma 'has begun mutating' towards a gradual erosion of the dividing line between traditional and non-traditional Muslims.

'The Wahhabis tried to use arms to impose their views but failed. Then they changed their tactics and established control over most of the Islamic mass media and a considerable number of publishing houses', Silantyev has reported.

According to his data, the bulk of the Islamic literature existing in Russia, especially cheap leaflets on the rudiments of Islam, is translated into Russian and 'circulated by Saudi and Kuwait foundations', and 'the most innocent quotations from them are calls not to obey the laws of non-Islamic states'.

Tirumala Bans All Religions except Hinduism

INDIA

Only one religion allowed in Tirumala: Hinduism
by Nirmala Carvalho
The government of Andhra Pradesh issued a ban last Friday against religions other than Hinduism in Tirumala. Violators risk three years in jail, fines of up to 5,000 rupees, or both.

New Delhi (AsiaNews) – In Tirumala only Hinduism is allowed and political activities are banned. In a decision taken last Friday by Rameshwar Thakur, governor of Andhra Pradesh, the state government has banned all religions other than the one traditionally associated with local places of worship or prayer. The state’s chief minister, Y. S. Rajasekhar Reddy, told AsiaNews that a bill to that effect will be presented in the next session to the state assembly.

Missionary activities by Christians in Tirumala and surrounding areas are blamed for the government’s new policy which includes punitive measures against violators including three years in jail, fines of up to 5,000 rupees or both.

Mgr Marampudi Joji, archbishop of Hyderabad, told AsiaNews that “in the face of persecution, we stand by our faith and our conviction. No political power can prevent us from spreading the Good News of the Lord.”

In his opinion, “this ordinance is essentially political and our Christian chief minister is buckling under pressure. We believe that the Indian constitution guarantees us the right to spread our faith. It is a matter of urgent concern that Andhra Pradesh should introduce such an ordinance. The government should be sensitive to the sentiments of the Christian community which has so tirelessly served all classes of society, irrespective of caste and creed. As archbishop of Hyderabad I say that no Christian has ever entered a place of worship of another religious community to proselytise. The Church has been involved and spearheaded dialogue between religions and within civil society. We are not afraid. In spite of laws Christians’ faith is stronger than ever. People are more united and closer to the Church. We live our faith and in the face of persecution we stand with courage and unity in Christ.”

Fr Anthoniraj Thumma, executive secretary of the Andhra Pradesh Federation of Churches and deputy secretary of the Andhra Pradesh Bishops’ Council, told AsiaNews that the Council “strongly opposes the ban. Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy yielded to the will of Hindu extremist groups who took advantage of the fact that he was Christian to blackmail him. This ordinance runs against many fundamental rights protected by our constitution and discriminates against non-Hindus. The Andhra Pradesh Bishops’ Council will take up its opposition when the issue comes before the state assembly.”

For John Dayal, chairman of the All Indian Catholic Union, “the ordinance violates the constitution of India and may go against the Supreme Court ruling in the Hindutva case which held that Hinduism was a way of life.”

The fact of the matter according to Dayal is that “the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and is affiliated organisations have targeted Reddy for his religion.” For instance, “RSS papers usually refer him by his Christian name, Samuel, rather than Rajshekhara.” But “no religion in the world claims a place exclusively as its own, where no one else can enter.”

“According to its constitution India is a secular state,” he explained. “So what is problem with religious freedom in a Tirumala? What happens to article 30 of the constitution [which recognises the right of minorities to establish and administer their own educational institutions]? What about Hindus’ right to choose where they want to get medical assistance and education? What happens to religious freedom for Dalits, Christians and other groups who live in the area?”


10 June 2007

Darwish Calls on US Feminists for Help

U.S. women can help Arab feminists

By NONIE DARWISH
GUEST COLUMNIST

Source: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/317680_arabfems30.html

As a teenager in Cairo in the mid-1960s, I watched with admiration those Americans who stood up for progress, minority rights, civil rights and women's rights, and who fought against extreme and archaic values. You became role models for me. I passionately followed your causes.

Now I need your help and support in a different cause: the struggle of Arab feminists, progressives and reformers for equal rights and individual freedom in Muslim countries, especially for women.

American women TV reporters have taken to wearing head covers in moderate Arab countries that do not enforce Islamic attire. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi wore a scarf in secular, Baathist Syria. By complying with the practices that radical Muslims force on women even in secular Muslim countries, those American women unknowingly undermine the cause of Arab feminists and can even be seen as lending tacit support to radicals. They need to understand better the culture in which they are operating.

Many Muslim women refuse to wear the Islamic head cover because they never did so in the majority of Muslim countries, where this practice was never enforced. But the radical Muslims are trying to intimidate Muslim women to cover themselves. Incidents of acid thrown in the faces of girls who do not wear head covers have been documented. All the women in my family in Egypt, myself included, have never worn the Islamic head cover.

I lived for 30 years in oppressive dictatorships and police states where most of the women around me had undergone the horrific procedure of clitoridectomy. Many more had to make peace with their inferior status.

Like most immigrants, I came to America, in 1978, to escape tyranny and enjoy freedom. I anguished as I looked the other way when I saw the suffering of my people on TV. I heard of death threats and intimidation against Arab feminists and reformers, including Ghada Jamsheer from Bahrain, Nawal El Saadawi from Egypt and even the late Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, who was stabbed in Cairo in 1994 by a radical Muslim. I was thankful to be living in America.

But I can no longer look the other way. A group of moderate Muslim women has decided, from the relative safety of America, to stand up for change in the Muslim world. Our goals are:

  • To achieve equal rights for Muslim women and minorities living in Muslim countries.
  • To assure freedom of religion, speech and the press.
  • To establish separation of mosque and state.
  • To end hate speech in the schools, mosques and government-sponsored media.
  • To realize peace with Israel.
  • To see the creation of Arab democracies under constitutions that protect freedoms.
It saddens me deeply to realize that even in America, we moderate Muslims are threatened and our views are misrepresented. Americans do not know whom to believe. The few moderates who openly criticize radical Islam, or the terror apologists who call terrorists freedom fighters? Muslims and former Muslims who demand equality for Muslim women, or those who say that Muslim women are happy just the way they are? Muslims who expose radical Islam's threat, or those who blame America for Arab failures that existed long before there was an America?

As a reformist of Arab-Muslim origin, it hurts me to see some well-meaning Americans sympathize with and appease the oppressive radicals of my culture. Islamists do not represent the hope and future of the Middle East, but the oppressive past.

We modern-day Arab-American moderate women now turn to the type of Americans I admired as a teenager in Cairo for experience, help and support. We are this decade's freedom fighters.

It would be easier for us to ignore the old country; to blame conditions in our homeland on outside factors, historical injustices or last century's imperialism. But those who want real change don't look away or blame others; they take on the challenge and responsibility of implementing change.

Though the Middle East is a complex region with many ancient variables, customs, differences and animosities, we must apply a universal concept of human rights, women's rights and minority rights to all countries on the globe -- with no exceptions for any religion or ideology.

Those Americans who stood up for these rights in the '60s -- and still do today -- are the natural allies of moderate Muslims in our struggle against Middle East religious and political tyranny. Stand with us now.

08 June 2007

HRW (Finally) Deplores Treatment of US Soldiers

Human Rights Watch has been substantially silent on radical Islamist abuses of women and children in Iraq, as well as inter-Islamic violence, market bombings, and the continued existence of Muqtedar al Sadr (who murdered another imam in the doorway to a mosque) in a position of power. They have also resounding ignored the abuses of the Islamic Republic of Iran towards its women, more than half of the country's population, as well as the oppression of the Bah'ai, the inequality of the justice system, and the employment of vicious hudud punishments under shari'a law. Finally, we hear a tiny peep for them that an American life is worth something. Better late than never, we suppose.

Source: http://www.upi.com/Security_Terrorism/Briefing/2007/06/08/human_rights_group_slams_terror_atrocities/7005/


Published: June 8, 2007 at 5:33 PM
Human rights group slams terror atrocities
WASHINGTON, June 8 (UPI) -- A U.S. human rights organization Friday demanded that Islamist extremists treat captured U.S. soldiers humanely.

Human Rights Watch said it was responding to a claim by the Islamic State of Iraq insurgent group, which claims ties to al-Qaida, that it killed two captive American soldiers.

"If confirmed, this act would constitute a serious violation of international humanitarian law and those responsible would be guilty of war crimes," Human Rights Watch said in a statement.

"Those claiming to hold the U.S. soldiers captive must treat the men humanely," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "If they have done otherwise , they have committed war crimes."

The two soldiers -- Spec. Alex Jimenez, 25, and Pvt. Byron Fouty, 19 -- went missing on May 12 when insurgents attacked their patrol near Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad. U.S. troops later discovered the body of Pfc. Joseph Anzack Jr., who had disappeared at the same time.

"Customary international law requires that all captured belligerents be treated humanely and provides that the murder or willful killing of a captured belligerent is a war crime," HRW said.

"No matter what the cause, killing captives violates international humanitarian law," said Whitson. "Every party to a conflict is subject to the laws of war, and the requirement to treat captive soldiers humanely is one of the most basic provisions."

The human rights group noted that killing a captive soldier "also violates basic precepts of Islamic law governing the conduct of war, according to most scholars of Islamic law."

03 June 2007

FEATURED ARTICLE: Heritage.org BG: UN Rights Councils


The United Nations Human Rights Council: A Disastrous First Year
http://www.heritage.org/Research/WorldwideFreedom/bg2038.cfm
June 1, 2007
Backgrounder #2038

The United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) was established in 2006 to replace the discredited U.N. Commission on Human Rights (CHR). Despite minimal safeguards against capture of the HRC by human rights abusers—the source of the commis­sion's ineffectiveness—HRC supporters, including U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour, were quick to declare that the new body represented the "dawn of a new era" in promoting human rights in the United Nations.[1] U.N. General Assembly President Jan Eliasson, who oversaw the reform negotiations, called the council "a new begin­ning for the promotion and protection of human rights" and declared that the council would be "prin­cipled, effective and fair."[2] After nearly a year in exist­ence and four regular sessions and four special sessions, the HRC has clearly been none of these.

The United States was one of only four countries that voted against the U.N. General Assembly reso­lution that created the council.[3] The U.S. cast its vote out of concern that the new council would lack safeguards against the problems that afflicted the CHR. Regrettably, this concern has proved to be well founded:

  • The council has mirrored the commission's obses­sive focus on Israel to the detriment of other, more severe human rights situations.
  • It has become a platform for human rights abusers to deflect criticism rather than being held to account.
  • The abusive states are leading an effort to under­mine the few effective aspects of the council, such as the special procedures dedicated to examining human rights abuses in specific countries, and are supporting efforts to weaken the universal periodic review of the human rights practices of all U.N. member states.

The U.S. chose not to run for a seat on the HRC in 2006 and 2007. This was the right decision. Until the council proves effective, the U.S. should not lend its credibility to the flawed body by participating.

However, the U.S. should use its influence to make the body effective by encouraging states with good human rights records to run for seats on the council and by speaking up on situations before the council. The U.S. should encourage the council to maintain procedures that have proven effective and strive to block efforts by human rights abusers to weaken those procedures. It should also seek to make the universal periodic review of council member states as frequent and objective as possible.

The council will make many of these decisions in the upcoming June session. Success in these areas should lead the U.S. to continue its engagement with the council. Failure would demonstrate that the council is simply incapable of effectively ad­vancing fundamental human rights, in which case the U.S. should publicly wash its hands of the council and withhold its portion of the council's budget from its contributions to the U.N.

Human Rights Failure at the U.N.
Since the birth of the United Nations, protecting and advancing fundamental human rights has been one of the organization's primary objectives. The drafters of the U.N. Charter included a pledge by member states "to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women."[4] U.N. treaties, such as the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, which the General Assembly passed in 1948, form the core of interna­tional standards for human rights.

Yet the U.N.'s recent record in promoting funda­mental human rights is riddled with failure and inaction. For nearly six decades, the U.N. Commis­sion on Human Rights epitomized this failure as the premier U.N. human rights body charged with reviewing the human rights performance of states and promoting human rights around the world.[5] Sadly, the commission devolved into a feckless orga­nization that human rights abusers used to block criticism and into a forum for attacks on Israel. [6]The disrepute of the CHR grew so great that even former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan acknowledged, "We have reached a point at which the commission's declining credibility has cast a shadow on the repu­tation of the United Nations system as a whole, and where piecemeal reforms will not be enough."[7]

After lengthy deliberations and negotiations, the U.N. General Assembly voted to replace the com­mission with a new Human Rights Council in March 2006.[8] Regrettably, during the negotiations, the General Assembly rejected many of the reforms and standards that had been proposed to ensure that the council would not repeat the mistakes of the commission.[9] For instance, the U.S. wanted a much smaller body than the 53-member commis­sion to enable it to act more easily; a high threshold for election to the council (a two-thirds vote of the General Assembly); and a prohibition on electing nations to the council that are under U.N. Security Council sanction for human rights abuses. Exten­sive negotiations in the General Assembly produced a 47-member council that is only marginally smaller than the commission, approved a simple majority vote for election rather than the two-thirds require­ment, and did not ban human rights violators from sitting on the council.

Because the resolution creating the HRC lacked serious membership criteria, the U.S. voted against it. "Absent stronger mechanisms for maintaining credible membership, the United States could not join consensus on this resolution," explained then-U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton. "We did not have sufficient confidence in this text to be able to say that the HRC would be better than its prede­cessor."[10] Well-known human rights abusers Burma, China, Cuba, Ethiopia, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, and Zimbabwe voted in favor of the new council.

After the resolution passed over U.S. objection, the U.S. announced that it would not run for a seat on the council in 2006 but would consider running in the future if the council proved effective. [11]Thus, the U.S. reserved judgment until the council had a chance to prove its merit. As Ambassador Bolton noted, "The real test will be the quality of member­ship that emerges on this council and whether it takes effective action to address serious human rights abuse cases like Sudan, Cuba, Iran, Zimba­bwe, Belarus, and Burma."[12] The council has failed on both counts.

Many Human Rights Abusers Elected to the Council
The resolution that created the HRC established no hard criteria for membership other than quotas for each of the regional groups in the U.N. and a requirement that council members be elected by a simple majority of the General Assembly (currently 97 of 192 votes). No state, no matter how poor its human rights record, is barred from membership. Even states under Security Council sanction for human rights abuses are not excluded.

The resolution instructs U.N. member states that "when electing members of the council, Member States shall take into account the contribution of candidates to the promotion and protection of human rights."[13] Candidates are also asked to sub­mit "voluntary pledges and commitments" on their qualifications for the council based on their past and future adherence to and observance of human rights standards.The toothlessness of this instruc­tion quickly became evident when notorious human rights abusers Algeria, Cuba, China, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Russia ran for election, asserting their strong commitment to human rights and pledging their commitment to such standards in the future.[14]

The May 2006 election showed that simply cre­ating a new council had not convinced the General Assembly to spurn the candidacies of human rights abusers. Despite their poor human rights records and disingenuous pledges, the General Assembly elected Algeria, China, Cuba, Pakistan, Russia, and Saudi Arabia to the council.[15]

Contrary to the bold predictions that the new council would be a significant improvement over the commission, the council's membership in 2006 was only marginally better than the commission's membership in 2005. The highly touted require­ment for a majority vote was undermined by the secret ballot voting process that shielded govern­ments from accountability for their votes and facili­tated horse trading and negotiations. This yielded only minimal improvement in the ratio of "free" to "partially free" to "not free" countries.(See Table 1.) Less than half of the commission's members in 2005 were considered "free" by Freedom House. China, Cuba, Egypt, Pakistan, Sudan, and Zimba­bwe—some of the world's worst human rights abusers—routinely used their positions on the commission to block scrutiny of their own prac­tices and to launch spurious attacks on other coun­tries for political reasons (e.g., Israel) or for speaking openly about their human rights viola­tions (e.g., the U.S.).

As Ambassador Bolton noted, for the council to perform better than the commission, it must start with better membership. The first council election produced a council in which 25 countries out of 47 members (53 percent) were ranked "free" by Free­dom House—a marginal improvement over the commission. Some of the more disreputable human rights abusers—Burma, North Korea, Sudan, and Zimbabwe—did not run for seats. Iran and Venezu­ela ran for seats but were unsuccessful, although Venezuela received enough votes (101) to have won a seat if other states had not won more support.[16] Despite these minor successes, a number of states with dismal human rights records won seats, including Algeria, Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Cuba, China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Russia.

The second council election, held on May 17, 2007, marked a regression from 2006.[17] The num­ber of "free" countries on the council declined, and the number of "not free" countries increased. The only significant victory was blocking Belarus from winning a seat. Yet until about a week before the election, Belarus and Slovenia were the only two candidates for the two open Eastern European seats. Only enormous pressure from human rights groups and the U.S. persuaded Bosnia and Herzegovina to run, denying Belarus a seat on the council.[18] How­ever, Angola, Egypt, Qatar, and Bolivia—states with dismal human rights records—were elected easily.[19]

http://www.heritage.org/Research/WorldwideFreedom/images/b2038_table1_lg.gif

An additional concern is that, unlike the robust competition for seats in the 2006 election, only two regions—Eastern European States and the Western Europe and Other States—offered more candidates than available seats in the 2007 election.[20] The decision of the African, Asian, and Latin American and Caribbean regions to offer only enough candi­dates to fill their open seats marked a disturbing return to the practices of the commission and defeated the purpose of competitive elections in the General Assembly, which were supposed to offer a larger choice of possible candidates in order to select the best possible members for the council.

The HRC's Disappointing Record
During its first year, the Human Rights Council has proven just as feckless in confronting human rights abuses and just as vulnerable to politically motivated attacks on Israel as its predecessor. Council decisions reveal that the bulk of its mem­bership has declined to scrutinize major violators of human rights and has instead focused dispropor­tionately on censuring Israel.[21]

Specifically, according to UN Watch, a Geneva-based nongovernmental organization (NGO) focused on the work of the Human Rights Council, "To date, there have been 12 country-specific HRC resolutions: nine censures of Israel and three non-condemnatory resolutions on Sudan." Even the commission had a better record. Over a 40-year period, only 30 percent of its resolutions condemn­ing specific states for human rights violations focused on Israel.[22]

In its first four regular sessions and four special sessions, the council failed to address ongoing repression in Belarus, China, Cuba, North Korea, and Zimbabwe and many other dire human rights situations around the world. Nor did the HRC censure the government of Sudan for its role in the genocide in Darfur. Instead, it adopted three mild decisions expressing "concern" regarding the human rights and humanitarian situation in Darfur and dispatched a "High-Level Mission to assess the human rights situation in Darfur and the needs of the Sudan in this regard."[23] However, the council did find the time to hold three special sessions on Israel and pass nine strong resolutions condemning Israel.

During more than 10 weeks worth of meetings in its first year, the council:

  • Passed 12 resolutions on the human rights situa­tions in only two countries. Nine were one-sided condemnations of Israel. Three were soft, non-condemnatory resolutions on Sudan.
  • Did not adopt a single resolution or decision condemning human rights abuses in 19 of the 20 "worst of the worst" repressive human rights sit­uations as identified by Freedom House in 2007. The 19 other situations—which do not include Sudan—are Belarus, Burma, China, Tibet (China), Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Cuba, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Laos, Libya, Western Sahara (Morocco), North Korea, Chechnya (Rus­sia), Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Zimbabwe.[24]
  • Convened its first three special sessions on Israel. In the first special session, it adopted a one-sided resolution condemning Israel but ignoring the provocations of Palestinian armed groups.[25] In a second special session on August 11, 2006, it adopted a resolution that strongly condemned Israel for "violations of human rights and breaches of international humanitarian law in Lebanon" but ignored provocations by Hezbol­lah.[26] The council convened its third special session on November 15, again on Israel.[27]
  • Convened its fourth special session in mid-December 2006 on the human rights situation in the Darfur region of Sudan. The tone and conclusions of the session were markedly differ­ent from those of previous special sessions in that the council took pains not to ascribe any wrongdoing to the Sudanese government. The resulting resolution was non-condemnatory, merely expressing "concern regarding the seri­ousness of the human rights and humanitarian situation." The resolution did not even mention the word "violations," and a European alterna­tive expressing "grave concern" was rejected. [28]
  • Requested a report during the fourth special ses­sion on the situation in Darfur. The investigatory mission was led by Nobel Peace Laureate Jody Williams. The Sudanese government denied the mission entry to Darfur, forcing it to investigate from Ethiopia and Chad. As expected, the mis­sion's report strongly condemned the Sudanese government for orchestrating and participating in "large-scale international crimes in Darfur."[29] Allies of Sudan on the council subsequently rejected the report as invalid because the investi­gatory team had not gone to Darfur. The council finally adopted a weak resolution that "took note" of the Williams report but did not adopt its recommendations or condemn the Sudanese government for its actions in Darfur.[30]
  • Decided in its fourth regular session to discon­tinue consideration of the human rights situa­tions in Iran and Uzbekistan under the 1503 procedure,[31] which involves confidential pro­ceedings to encourage government cooperation. The confidential nature of the proceedings makes it difficult to determine the reasoning for discontinuing consideration of the human rights situations in Iran and Uzbekistan.[32] This decision is an appalling abdication by the coun­cil of its responsibilities, considering that many human rights organizations and the U.S. Depart­ment of State have argued convincingly that severe human rights abuses and government-sanctioned oppression and mistreatment de­mand scrutiny by the council. Despite evidence of extensive human rights abuse, 25 of the coun­cil's 47 members voted to end scrutiny of Iran and Uzbekistan.[33]
  • Adopted two resolutions that condemn "defama­tion of religions" but specifically mention only Islam. After a Danish newspaper published car­toons of the prophet Mohammed in 2005, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) led an effort to persuade the commission and then the council to adopt a resolution against the defamation of Islam. In June 2006, the council responded by passing a resolution merely requir­ing expert reports. However, it passed a second resolution in March 2007 that expressed "deep concern at attempts to identify Islam with terror­ism, violence and human rights violations" and urged states to "to take all possible measures to promote tolerance and respect for all religions and their value systems and to complement legal systems with intellectual and moral strategies to combat religious hatred and intolerance."[34] Worryingly, the resolution asserts that the right to freedom of expression may be limited out of "respect for religions and beliefs."

All council members pledge their commitment to human rights standards when they run for elec­tion. As a council member, a country is supposed to "uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights."[35] Yet the council's actions reveal a profound lack of commitment to either human rights or freedom.

Some of this disappointing performance can be blamed on the negligible difference in quality between the council's membership and the commis­sion's membership. The situation is aggravated by the shift in proportional representation of regions from the commission, which had greater represen­tation of Western democracies, to the council, in which Africa and Asia control a majority. This has dramatically increased the influence of groups like the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) and the OIC. Members of the NAM also held a majority of seats in the council's first year. The OIC held 17 seats, more than the one-third (16 seats) required to call a spe­cial session. Unsurprisingly, both groups have repeatedly used their influence to attack Israel and to protect abusive states from council scrutiny.

However, the most frustrating aspect of the council's first year has been the reluctance of free, democratic states, including South Africa and India, to support human rights efforts on the council. As UN Watch noted:

[A]lthough slightly more than half of the council's 47 members are free democracies, only a minority of these countries—about a dozen—have consistently voted in defense of the values and principles that the council is supposed to promote. Instead, the body has been dominated by an increasingly bra­zen alliance of repressive regimes seeking not only to spoil needed reforms but to un­dermine the few meaningful mechanisms of UN human rights protection that already ex­ist. Their goal is impunity for systematic abuses. Unfortunately, too many democra­cies have thus far gone along with the spoil­ers, out of loyalty to regional groups and other political alliances.[36]

A UN Watch analysis of significant actions taken by the council during its first year concluded that only 13 of the council's 47 members were net posi­tive contributors to its human rights agenda. Four free democracies—Indonesia, Mali, Senegal, and South Africa—were among the 17 receiving the worst score of –16 points out of a possible –20 points. India did minimally better, receiving a score of –15 points.[37]

The Case Against Participation
The council's disappointing record led the U.S. to decline to seek election to the council for the second year in a row in 2007. As State Department Spokes­man Sean McCormack explained:

We believe that the Human Rights Council has thus far not proved itself to be a credible body in the mission that it has been charged with. There has been a nearly singular focus on is­sues related to Israel, for example, to the ex­clusion of examining issues of real concern to the international system, whether that's in Cuba or Burma or in North Korea.

So we are going to remain as observers to the Human Rights Council and we hope that over time, that this body will expand its focus and become a more credible institution representa­tive of the important mission with which it is charged. But nonetheless, the United States will remain actively engaged not only in the UN system but also outside of the UN system in promoting human rights.[38]

The U.S. decision not to run for a seat on the Human Rights Council drew sharp criticism from human rights groups, U.N. advocates, and political opponents. These groups claim that the U.S. is undermining the council's credibility and that it would be a stronger, more effective advocate for human rights if the U.S. were on it. For instance, Representative Tom Lantos (D–CA), chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, strongly criticized the Administration's decision:

[I]n an act of unparalleled defeatism, the Ad­ministration announced that for a second year in a row, the United States will step aside to allow a cabal of military juntas, single-party states and tin-pot dictators to retain their death grip on the world's human rights machinery.[39]

There is little evidence to support Representative Lantos's claim, which incorrectly assumes that sim­ply having the U.S. on the council would have changed its decisions. Because council membership is based on geographic representation, the U.S. would simply displace one of the seven countries representing the Western Europe and Other States region, which already vote largely as the U.S. would vote. Thus, any gain from a U.S. vote on the council would be marginal.

Nor would winning a seat on the council neces­sarily give the U.S. greater voice or influence. Any U.N. member state can comment on and speak to issues before the council, and the U.S. has fre­quently expressed its support of or opposition to various resolutions and decisions.

What the U.S. Should Do
Any hope that the Human Rights Council would rectify the poor record of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in holding human rights abusers to account has proven illusory. The council does not incorporate the protections and standards that would lead to a more effective body. It has the potential to become a stronger body than its dis­credited predecessor, but this depends entirely on the actions of its members.

To help to achieve this goal, the U.S. should:

  • Refuse to run for a seat on the council until it proves worthy of U.S. membership. Human rights activists' argument that U.S. membership could make the council more effective is doubt­ful. The U.S. has been a close observer and active contributor to council deliberations and pro­ceedings, even though it is not a member. Yet, despite the best efforts of the U.S. and other countries, the council has fallen far short of expectations. U.S. participation would undoubt­edly increase the council's prestige but is unlikely to increase its effectiveness.

    The U.S. should not lend its legitimacy to such a flawed body until the council begins to take its responsibilities seriously. A premature decision to run for a seat would only mask the deplorable state of the current council. As State Department spokesman Sean McCormack noted, "We would hope that if we do come to the day when we decide to run for the Human Rights Council, it will have gotten to the point where it is a credible institution and that we could, in fact, lend our diplomatic weight to the council as a participant."[40]
  • Press for positive actions in the council, par­ticularly regarding its special procedures, the universal periodic review, and interactions with NGOs. During the upcoming June session, the council is scheduled to decide a number of key issues, including clarifying rules for NGO participation; deciding whether or not to main­tain some or all of the "Special Procedures" (the special rapporteurs and representatives, indepen­dent experts, and working groups) inherited from the commission; and determining the specific details for the universal periodic review of all U.N. member countries' human rights practices.

    Even though the council has proven generally ineffective in advancing fundamental human rights, some U.N. human rights activities are use­ful, particularly the independent experts who investigate human rights issues in specific coun­tries. The council is currently reviewing the spe­cial procedures system to decide how to change the system, if at all. Predictably, the human rights abusers on the council are trying to use a code of conduct to limit the independence of country-specific experts and trying to minimize or elimi­nate their ability to criticize individual countries for human rights problems,[] as well as to elimi­nate country mandates for special rapporteurs to investigate human rights in countries like Belarus, Burma, Cuba, and North Korea. These same states are trying to limit NGO input into council deliberations. The council is also discuss­ing the details of how the universal periodic review of human rights in all U.N. member states will work. Unsurprisingly, the abuser states are trying to weaken the reviews.

    The U.S. should oppose these efforts to weaken the council's special procedures, institutions, and other activities that help to advance funda­mental human rights and hold abusive regimes to account.

    Weigh the human rights records of aid recipi­ents more heavily when allocating U.S. devel­opment assistance. The U.S. spends billions of dollars in development assistance each year, but this assistance has a dismal record in catalyzing economic growth. Despite the poor record of development assistance and the mounting evi­dence that financial assistance is far less impor­tant to development than sound economic policy and a strong rule of law, support for development assistance remains strong in the U.S. Congress.

    The U.S. should focus development assistance on countries with good policies and use it to support U.S. policy priorities.[42] Advancing fundamental human rights is and should be a U.S. priority. The U.S. should try to change the dynamics of the HRC by focusing development assistance on countries with demonstrable records of improv­ing human rights practices and supporting human rights on the council.

    Clearly state that unless the HRC demonstrates improvement in confronting and advancing fundamental human rights, the U.S. will cease to interact with the council and will withhold its portion of HRC funding. The U.S. should not wait indefinitely for the council to improve. Instead, it should disengage from the council if the council fails to demonstrate greater willingness to confront human rights abusers or to adopt a mean­ingful universal periodic review process, if the council eliminates the practice of assigning experts to assess the human rights situations in individual countries, or if the General Assembly continues to elect human rights abusers to the council. Such failures would clearly indicate that the human rights abusers are running the council agenda and that further U.S. engagement, as a member or as an observer, could not repair the damage. Rather than continuing to interact with a fatally flawed body, the U.S. should refuse to par­ticipate in council processes and withhold U.S. contributions to the body.[43]

Conclusion
Advancing fundamental human rights is and should be a U.S. priority. However, in its inaugural year, the Human Rights Council has proven itself to be ineffective in addressing and advancing human rights. The Bush Administration correctly decided not to seek a seat on the council.

U.S. participation in international bodies should not be automatic; rather, the U.S. should base its participation on the effectiveness and relevance of the body to U.S. policy priorities. On this basis, the Human Rights Council is a grave disappointment that is unlikely to be greatly improved by U.S. mem­bership. The May 17 election of council member­ship does not inspire confidence that the council will improve its performance in the coming year.

The U.S. should continue its efforts to improve the HRC's membership, special procedures, and institutions, but it should refuse to lend the council the credibility of U.S. membership until the council takes its responsibilities seriously by censuring major human rights abusers, exposing their repre­hensible actions to public scrutiny, and eschewing its disproportionate focus on Israel. The U.S. should use its influence to oppose efforts to weaken the council's special procedures, universal periodic review, and other activities that contribute to the promotion of fundamental human rights. The U.S. should also use its foreign assistance to encourage improved human rights practices among council members and aid recipients more broadly.

However, the U.S. should not wait indefinitely for the council to improve. If the council does not significantly improve its performance in the coming year or if abusive states succeed in gutting the coun­cil of its effective elements, the U.S. should sever ties with the council and withhold financial support for the body.

Brett D. Schaefer is Jay Kingham Fellow in Inter­national Regulatory Affairs in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. Maria Verbanac, an assis­tant in the Thatcher Center, helped with the research for this paper.

[1] UN Watch, "Dawn of a New Era? Assessment of the United Nations Human Rights Council and Its Year of Reform," May 7, 2007, at www.unwatch.org/atf/cf/%7b6deb65da-be5b-4cae-
8056-8bf0bedf4d17%7d/dawn_of_a_new_era_
hrc%20report_final.pdf
(May 24, 2007).

[2] U.N. General Assembly, Department of Public Information, "General Assembly Establishes New Human Rights Council by Vote of 170 in Favour to 4 Against, with 3 Abstentions," GA/10449, March 15, 2006, at www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2006/ga10449.doc.htm (May 24, 2007).

[3]Ibid.

[4] Charter of the United Nations, preamble, at www.un.org/aboutun/charter/index.html (May 24, 2007).

[5] United Nations, "UN in Brief," chap. 3, at www.un.org/Overview/uninbrief/chapter3_humanrights.html (May 24, 2007).

[6] See Brett D. Schaefer, "The United Nations Human Rights Council: Repeating Past Mistakes," Heritage Foundation Lecture No. 964, September 19, 2006, at www.heritage.org/Research/WorldwideFreedom/upload/hl_964.pdf (May 24, 2007).

[7] Kofi Annan, "Secretary-General's Address to the Commission on Human Rights," Office of the Spokesman for the U.N. Secretary-General, April 7, 2005, at www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=1388 (May 24, 2007). See also Mark P. Lagon, Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Organization Affairs, U.S. Department of State, "The UN Commission on Human Rights: Protector or Accomplice?" testimony before the Subcommittee on Africa, Global Human Rights and International Operations, Committee on International Relations, U.S. House of Representatives, April 19, 2005, at www.state.gov/p/io/rls/rm/44983.htm (May 24, 2007).

[8] Press release, "Explanation of Vote by Ambassador John R. Bolton, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations, on the Human Rights Council Draft Resolution, in the General Assembly," U.S. Mission to the United Nations, March 15, 2006, at www.un.int/usa/06_051.htm (May 24, 2007).

[9] See Schaefer, "The United Nations Human Rights Council."

[10] U.N. General Assembly, "General Assembly Establishes New Human Rights Council."

[11] Press statement, "The United States Will Not Seek Election to the UN Human Rights Council," U.S. Department of State, April 6, 2006, at www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2006/64182.htm (May 24, 2007).

[12] Press release, "Explanation of Vote by Ambassador John R. Bolton."

[13] U.N. General Assembly, "Human Rights Council," Resolution A/RES/60/251, 60th Sess., April 3, 2006, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/
A.RES.60.251_En.pdf
(May 24, 2007).

[14] For pledges and candidates for election to the Human Rights Council in 2006, see U.N. General Assembly, "Human Rights Council," at www.un.org/ga/60/elect/hrc (May 24, 2007). For pledges and candidates for election to the Human Rights Council in 2007, see U.N. General Assembly, "Human Rights Council Election," May 17, 2007, at www.un.org/ga/61/elect/hrc (May 24, 2007). See also Brett D. Schaefer, "Human Rights Relativism Redux: UN Human Rights Council Mirrors Discred­ited Human Rights Commission," Heritage Foundation WebMemo No. 1069, May 10, 2006, at www.heritage.org/Research/InternationalOrganizations/wm1069.cfm.

[15] Schaefer, "Human Rights Relativism Redux" and "The United Nations Human Rights Council."

[16] See Human Rights Watch, "Human Rights Council: Latin America & Caribbean States: 8 seats, 11 Declared Candidates," at www.hrw.org/un/elections/lac/lac.htm (May 24, 2007).

[17] The resolution calls for one-third of the HRC to be elected annually. The 47 members elected in 2006 were randomly assigned terms of one, two, or three years to set the stage for this process. Each member elected in 2007 will hold its term for the full three years. For a list of members and their terms, see U.N. Human Rights Council, "Membership of the Human Rights Council," at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/membership.htm (May 24, 2007).

[18] According to one news report, Bosnia and Herzegovina decided to run only after the U.S. strongly implied to other European countries that the U.S. would run for a council seat next year if Belarus did not win a seat. If true, this is a perverse and shortsighted strategy that would undermine America's principled position not to run for a seat until the council proves its merit in return for only a one-time defeat of Belarus. Maggie Farley, "U.S. Appears Willing to Join U.N. Human Rights Panel," Los Angeles Times, May 18, 2007, at www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/
la-fg-rights18may18,1,2886241.story
(May 24, 2007).

[19] See Anne Bayefsky, "The Oppressors' Club," National Review, May 18, 2007, at http://article.nationalreview.com/?
q=NDM2NTQ2ODZmNDU3MTA2ZTBiNDFiNGExZWRjMWM2YjQ
(May 24, 2007).

[20] For a list of the candidates for the Human Rights Council in 2007, see U.N. General Assembly, "Human Rights Council Election."

[21] For instance, the July resolution on Israel and Palestine was passed by a vote of 29 to 11 with five abstentions, the August decision on the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon was passed by a vote of 27 to 11 with 8 abstentions, and the November decision on Darfur involved a vote of 25 to 11 with 10 abstentions. Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom voted against these resolutions. Switzerland and Japan voted for at least one. Press release, "Human Rights Council Decides to Dispatch Urgent Fact-Finding Mission to the Occupied Palestinian Territories," U.N. Human Rights Council, July 6, 2006, at www.unog.ch/unog/website/news_media.nsf/
(httpNewsByYear_en)/6382E27860145DA7C12571A3004D1F19
(May 24, 2007); press release, "Second Special Session of Human Rights Council Decides to Establish High-Level Inquiry Commission for Lebanon," U.N. Human Rights Council, August 11, 2006, at www.unog.ch/unog/website/news_media.nsf/(httpNewsByYear_en)/F16C6E9AE98880A0C12571C700379F8C (May 24, 2007); and press release, "Human Rights Council Notes with Concern Serious Human Rights and Humanitarian Situation in Darfur," November 28, 2006, at www.unog.ch/unog/website/news_media.nsf/
(httpNewsByYear_en)/62C6B3F928618CCEC12572340046C4BB
(May 24, 2007).

[22] This figure increased over time. In 2005, the commission adopted four resolutions against Israel and four resolutions against all other countries. UN Watch, "Dawn of a New Era?"

[23] U.N. Human Rights Council, "Decision 2/115: Darfur," November 28, 2006, at http://ap.ohchr.org/documents/E/HRC/
decisions/A-HRC-DEC-2-115.doc
(May 24, 2007), and "Decision S-4/101: Situation of Human Rights in Darfur," December 13, 2006, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/
specialsession/4/docs/Dec_S_4_101_en.doc
(May 24, 2007).

[24] Freedom House, The Worst of the Worst: The World's Most Repressive Societies, 2007 (New York: Freedom House, 2007), at www.freedomhouse.org/uploads/press_release
/worstofworst_07.pdf
(May 24, 2007).

[25] U.N. Human Rights Council, "Human Rights Situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory," Special Session Resolution S-1/1, July 6, 2006, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/
specialsession/A.HRC.RES.S-1.1_en.pdf
(May 25, 2007).

[26] U.N. General Assembly, "Report of the Human Rights Council on Its Second Special Session," August 17, 2006, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/
docs/specialsession/A.HRC.S-2.2_en.pdf
(May 24, 2007).

[27] See U.N. General Assembly, "3rd Special Session on Israeli Military Incursions in Occupied Palestinian Territory," Web site, November 15, 2006, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/
specialsession/3/index.htm
(May 25, 2007).

[28] UN Watch, "Dawn of a New Era?" p. 12.

[29] U.N. Human Rights Council, "Report of the High-Level Mission on the Situation of Human Rights in Darfur Pursuant to Human Rights Council Decision S-4/101," A/HRC/4/80, March 9, 2007, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/4session/reports.htm (May 25, 2007).

[3] U.N. Human Rights Council, "Report to the General Assembly on the Fourth Session of the Human Rights Council," A/HRC/4/ L.11/Add.1, March 30, 2007, at www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/
docs/4session/A_HRC_4_L.11_Add1.doc
(May 25, 2007).

[31] The Working Group on Situations (WGS) examines the particular situations referred to it by the Working Group on Com­munications under the 1503 procedure. The WGS then makes recommendations to the council on how to proceed. In these cases, it recommended that the council discontinue consideration of the situations in Iran and Uzbekistan. The WGS is composed of representatives from five countries, including Zimbabwe, despite that country's own massive abuses that merit council consideration. See Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, "Working Group on Situations," at www.ohchr.org/english/issues/situations/index.htm (May 25, 2007).

[32] Press release, "Human Rights Council Concludes Fourth Session," U.N. Human Rights Council, March 30, 2007, at www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/view01/
21184A0A02055F5BC12572AE005D09C6
(May 25, 2007).

[33] Human Rights Watch, "UN: Rights Council Fails Victims in Iran, Uzbekistan," March 27, 2007, at http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/03/27/uzbeki15577.htm (May 25, 2007).

[34] U.N. Human Rights Council, "Report to the General Assembly on the Fourth Session of the Human Rights Council."

[35] U.N. General Assembly, "Human Rights Council."

[36] UN Watch, "Dawn of a New Era?" p. 1.

[37] U.N. Watch scored 20 "key actions" of the council in its first year. The positions taken by countries on these key actions were assigned a value: 1 point for taking a positive position for human rights in the council, 0 points for taking a neutral position, and –1 point for taking a negative position. Ibid., pp. 5–8 and 26–27.

[38] Sean McCormack, "Daily Press Briefing," U.S. Department of State, March 6, 2007, at www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/dpb/2007/mar/81471.htm (May 25, 2007).

[39] Press release, "Lantos Blasts Administration Decision Not to Take Part in United Nations Human Rights Council," Committee on Foreign Affairs, U.S. House of Representatives, March 6, 2007, at www.internationalrelations.house.gov/
press_display.asp?id=313
(May 25, 2007).

[40] Press statement, "The United States Will Not Seek Election to the UN Human Rights Council."

[41] UN Watch, "Dawn of a New Era?" pp. 16–17.

[42] See by Brett D. Schaefer and Anthony B. Kim, "U.S. Aid Does Not Build Support at the U.N.," Heritage Foundation Back­grounder No. 2018, March 26, 2007, at www.heritage.org/Research/InternationalOrganizations/upload/bg_2018.pdf.

[43] The HRC is funded through the U.N. regular budget, so the U.S. cannot directly withhold funding. Instead, it could with­hold an amount equal to the U.S. portion of the council's budget (about $3 million annually) from the U.N. regular budget. This withholding would have little direct effect on the council's budget because the withholding would be spread across all U.N. activities funded through the regular budget, but it would clearly signal U.S. displeasure with the council. Congress should also take this as a lesson to move toward more direct funding of U.N. activities, ideally through voluntary budgets, so that the U.S. can tailor its financial support to bolster U.N. activities that perform well or support U.S. interests and to lessen support for activities that perform poorly or do not support U.S. interests.