Subscribe to The Jewish Standard free weekly newsletter

 
font size: +
 

Scott Garrett: U.N. Human Rights Council a ‘backwards step’

Garrett urges president to withdraw U.S. from council

 
 
 
image
In a letter to President Obama, Rep. Scott Garrett urged him to withdraw the United States from the Human Rights Council.

Despite its name, the U.N. Human Rights Council has a deplorable human rights record, said Rep. Scott Garrett (R-5), who organized a bipartisan congressional letter to President Obama urging him to withdraw the United States from the council.

“It’s ignored human-rights violations,” Garrett told The Jewish Standard on Tuesday, shortly after he sent the letter. “We’ve seen in the past year in Iran there were allegations of brutality by the government toward its own people, killing their own people. That’s all ignored by the council.”

According to the letter, signed by 33 members of the House of Representatives, “The decision of your administration to join the Human Rights Council in March 2009 marks a backwards step in recognizing the human rights of individuals across the globe.”

It goes on to state that the council “effectively ignored the urgent human rights situation in Kyrgyzstan, and also failed to take any real action on the deplorable behavior of the Iranian government during its general election in June 2006.”

The letter also cited the June election of Cuba, which the U.S. State Department classifies as a state sponsor of terrorism, to the vice chairmanship of the council.

“What you’re doing here is lending credibility and taxpayer dollars to a hypocritical organization,” Garrett told the Standard. “When you have a council that has issued more resolutions that condemn Israel than all of the other countries combined, there’s no simple reforming by being at the table.”

Felice Gaer, director of the American Jewish Committee’s Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights, argued that the United States joined the council to change it, and change has to come from within the council.

“The purpose of running for the council was for the purpose of changing it. You don’t change it by not being there,” she said. “When the U.S. was not a member of the council, the U.S. point of view was irrelevant.”

The Obama administration last year tapped Gaer, a Paramus resident, to attend a preparatory meeting for the United Nations Conference Against Racism, dubbed Durban II.

The United States joined the Human Rights Council last year after years of refusing to join. In a 2007 address to the U.N. General Assembly, President George W. Bush said, “The American people are disappointed by the failures of the Human Rights Council. This body has been silent on repression by regimes from Havana to Caracas to Pyongyang and Tehran — while focusing its criticism excessively on Israel.”

Gaer pointed out that the Human Rights Council has a five-year review scheduled for 2011, which represents an opportunity for major change. The United States, she said, has more credibility to press for that change, serving on the council.

Its precursor, the Commission on Human Rights, established in 1946, became known as a haven for the worst violators of human rights, such as Cuba, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, and the council’s 2003 chair, Libya. In turn, the commission condemned Israel with what many called a clear bias. Then-U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan wrote in a 2005 report that the commission’s “declining credibility and professionalism . . . cast a shadow on the reputation of the United Nations’ system as a whole.”
The General Assembly created the Human Rights Council in 2006 to replace the discredited commission. The Human Rights Council has, however, received much of the same criticism as its predecessor. Council members include Cuba, Saudi Arabia, Libya, China, Pakistan, and Nigeria. The first three of the council’s special sessions in 2006 focused on Israel.

“It is the height of irony that the United Nations Human Rights Council sees fit to disproportionately and unfairly criticize Israel while not addressing the egregious human rights record of many of its own members,” said Rep. Steve Rothman (D-9) in a statement to the paper. Rothman was not a signatory to the letter.

“The Obama Administration has said that they decided to participate in this Council to fight ‘against the anti-Israel crap.’ I think that so long as our presence on this misnamed council reduces the anti-Israel ‘crap’ coming out of the committee, our membership is worthwhile.”

The United States’ term on the council expires in 2012.

 
 
 
 
Add a Comment

Name:

Email:

Location:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


Auto-login on future visits

Show my name in the online users list

Forgot your password?

 

It was so beautiful

Teaneck youth helps Israeli boys celebrate b’nai mitzvah

At his bar mitzvah at Cong. Keter Torah in February, Teaneck resident Daniel Raykher announced that he’d use a portion of his gift money to sponsor bar mitzvahs for disadvantaged boys in Israel.

True to his word — and with lots of help from his parents and Bris Avrohom executive director Rabbi Mordechai Kanelsky — Daniel and his family traveled to Israel this summer to join 13 young men at the festive occasion.

 

Hudson cultural forum tackles diverse issues

When North Bergen resident Burt Gitlin launched the HudsonJewish social/intellectual salon project in June, he was looking for a way to bring area Jews together.

“I thought this might be an easy, soft sell,” said Gitlin, stressing that HudsonJewish — which seeks to revive local Jewish life by pulling together disparate elements of the community — is not a religious entity but more of a cultural organization.

“We try to be secular,” said Raylie Dunkel, the group’s program director. “The salons take a look at what affects you as a Jew, but not in terms of being a religious person.”

 

Demolitions are at center of battle over Jerusalem

JERUSALEM – Deep in a valley below Jerusalem’s Old City, a narrow alleyway leads to the remains of three bulldozed Arab homes in an area slated to become an archeological park.

The homes, now just slabs of collapsed concrete, are in the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan. Despite international protests — including from the U.S. secretary of state — the remaining 85 or so houses there, which were built without permits, are to be demolished to make room for a park the city hopes will be a major draw for tourists.

The dispute over the area, together with recent evictions in the Arab neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, are the most recent markers in the battle over Jerusalem. Israel seeks to cement its control over the city in part by altering the demographic character of its eastern, Arab neighborhoods.

 

RECENTLYADDED

Michael Oren, making the case for Obama

WASHINGTON – Michael Oren outlines what may be his toughest assignment: Making the case to a skeptical public for a leader who’s hard to pin down.

Pitching Bibi to the Americans?

No, that’s an easy one.

The real problem for the Israeli ambassador to Washington is how to make Israelis understand President Obama.

 

Netanyahu, Abbas each give a little on first day of talks

WASHINGTON – Tell us what you want. Now listen to what your partner wants. Now tell us what your partner wants.

In slow, almost excruciating increments, talks between Israelis and Palestinians are taking on the dimensions of counseling sessions moderated by the United States.

Heading into a White House dinner Wednesday evening with President Obama and the Jordanian and Egyptian leaders, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas outlined their bottom lines: security and recognition for the Jewish state, settlement halts and final-status negotiations for Abbas.

 

Reality check: Konrad Adenauer Foundation brings Muslim leaders to Holocaust sites

Rabbi Jack Bemporad wants it known that the visit he organized of eight Muslim-American leaders to concentration camps was a historic success.

Bemporad, director of the Carlstadt-based Center for Interreligious Understanding, called the Aug. 7 to 11 trip to Auschwitz in Germany and Dachau in Poland “a breakthrough in many respects, because … we took imams like [Yasir] Qadhi, for example,” who 10 years ago called the Holocaust a hoax. (Bemporad led the trip, which was sponsored by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, with Prof. Marshall Breger of the Catholic University of America.)

 
 
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30