GENEVA, April 29, 2020 — Cuba, Russia, and Saudi Arabia are running for election to the UN's top human rights body, sparking outrage from human rights activists. The candidacies of the three dictatorships were revealed today in a report by UN Watch, a Geneva-based independent human rights group that monitors the world body. The non-governmental organization called on Britain, France, Germany, the United States and other democracies to "vigorously oppose the election of these repressive regimes," and to ensure there is competition in each regional group.
In October, the General Assembly will elect 15 new members to the 47-nation council, which was founded in 2006 to address situations of human rights abuses around the world. "Electing Russia, Cuba or Saudi Arabia as a UN judge on human rights is like asking the foxes to guard the chickens,” said Hillel Neuer, Executive Director of UN Watch. These are authoritarian and repressive regimes that systematically deny basic freedoms to their people. They have also denied entry to many of the council's own experts who sought to visit and investigate human rights abuses. By any measure, these regimes are not qualified to serve on a body that shapes global human rights standards, and which is charged with addressing violations and protecting victims. Seats on the council are allotted to regions, and countries from those regions often make deals in advance to agree on a fixed slate of candidates, eliminating any competition. The final list of candidates — and whether Cuba, Russia or Saudi Arabia will face any competition at all — may not be known until shortly before the election by the General Assembly in October 2020, in which 193 members can vote. Fact-checking False Claims by Regimes
In their candidacy filings and other submissions made to the UN, Cuba, Russia, and Saudi Arabia declare their commitment to human rights. However, UN Watch's report provides 15 fact-check rebuttals to claims made by the candidates, five for each country. These include: • Cuba's pledge to the UN says it is committed to "combating racism," yet security agents subject Afro-Cubans to racial epithets and beatings. The one-party state's UN pledge refers to the "democratic nature of the Cuban political system," yet Havana silences opposition figures like Jose Daniel Ferrer, who was just released from prison after six months behind bars, convicted on false charges, where he was tortured.
• Russia's pledge to the UN says it opposes "interference in the internal affairs of states," yet it routinely wages disinformation campaigns against Western democracies, including during the Coronavirus pandemic. Russia claims "strict compliance" with international law and human rights obligations, yet a UN report last month accused the regime of war crimes for bombing civilians in Syria. • Saudi Arabia has not yet published its campaign pledge, but submitted a report to the UNHRC, in its most recent mandatory review, claiming a stellar human rights record. The regime claims to use the death sentence only for "serious crimes"; yet it executed 184 people in 2019—a record number for the kingdom. Saudi Arabia claims "protection of women's rights"; yet it jails and tortures women's rights activists who protest the country's discriminatory policies such as the male guardian requirement. In summary, the election of Cuba, Russia, and Saudi Arabia—regimes which systematically violate the human rights of their citizens—would cast a shadow upon the reputation of the United Nations. It will be an insult to their political prisoners and many other victims—and a defeat for the global cause of human rights—if the UN helps gross abusers act as champions and global judges of human rights. Appeal to UN LeadersUN Watch is calling on UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet to oppose the hypocritical candidacies. It would be absurd if the UN disregarded its own rules and principles by rubber-stamping the election of Cuba, Russia, and Saudi Arabia — even though these regimes systematically violate the human rights of their own citizens and consistently frustrate UN initiatives to protect the human rights of others. In October 2019, Venezuela was nearly defeated with the late entry of Costa Rica, showing that Cuba could lose the election if democracies encourage other countries to run in the Latin American and Caribbean group. UN Watch also led a successful campaign in 2016 to defeat Russia's bid for a council seat, again showing that the nations of the world can reject gross abusers if they so choose. |