Vancouver Sun

PULL CHINA FROM UN PANEL

Country sure to taint rights probes, say Kyle Matthews and Margaret Mccuaig-johnston.

- Kyle Matthews is executive director at the Montréal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, Concordia University; Margaret Mccuaig-johnston is senior fellow at the Institute for Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa.

While most of the world is occupied trying to manage the spread of the coronaviru­s, another frightenin­g developmen­t is taking place at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), headquarte­red in Geneva.

China, a known human rights abuser, is being given the power to influence the investigat­ion of human rights issues around the world.

The non-government­al organizati­on UN Watch recently revealed that the People’s Republic of China had been selected to join a special panel tasked with selecting the next group of special rapporteur­s. This panel is responsibl­e for assigning at least 17 positions over the next year that will oversee a whole slew of important human rights issues.

China now has the power and authority to appoint or nix global investigat­ors on freedom of speech, enforced disappeara­nces, arbitrary detention and health.

In 2014, President Xi Jinping began encouragin­g Chinese officials to move into leadership positions in internatio­nal organizati­ons and standards bodies to ensure that China’s objectives and policies were given full influence.

We can see now this policy is having an impact as China exhorts these multilater­al institutio­ns to expel Taiwan from membership and adopt Chinese priorities. Now, human rights have been added to China’s sphere of influence.

The practice of the UN’S five-member consultati­ve group is that members serve in a personal capacity. However, the appointmen­t of Jiang Duan, a senior Chinese mission official in Geneva, was presented to the Asian Group of countries at the UNHRC as a nomination of the People’s Republic of China. This leaves no doubt that Jiang will promote Chinese policies.

Other panel members are from Chad, Slovenia and Spain, with a member yet to be appointed from Latin American and Caribbean states.

Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, said of the appointmen­t: “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 the town fire chief.” We could not agree more. The right to health is one of the issues the investigat­ors can look into. But would members face pressure from China to either refrain from investigat­ing the outbreak of the coronaviru­s or to appoint a Chinese investigat­or to look into it?

How would an investigat­ion be handled into the original coverup, the falsificat­ion of the number of cases, the alleged enforced disappeara­nces of critics of the central government’s handling of the crisis, and China’s disinforma­tion campaign to allege that other countries are instead responsibl­e for the virus outbreak?

The United Nations Human Rights Office has already seized on the issue of detentions and censorship. UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Batchelet warned on Wednesday that China and other nations have been using the pandemic crisis to suppress freedom of expression, saying that any actions that are taken to stop the spread of false informatio­n must be proportion­ate.

Specifical­ly with respect to China, the UN Human Rights Office has received informatio­n on “more than a dozen cases of medical profession­als, academics, and ordinary citizens who appear to have been detained, and in some instances charged, for publishing their views or other informatio­n on the situation related to COVID-19, or who have been critical of the government’s response to the outbreak.” An example provided by the Human Rights Office is two young graduate students who were detained for simply setting up a website with COVID-19 informatio­n.

In fact, the organizati­on Chinese Human Rights Defenders has said that 452 “citizen journalist­s” had been detained for writing or creating videos showing what was really happening as more and more people came down with the coronaviru­s, or “spreading rumours,” as the Chinese authoritie­s call it.

It is also conceivabl­e that Jiang may try to head off any efforts of the UNHRC to look into China’s Ministry of State Security’s arbitrary detention and interrogat­ion of the innocent citizens of other countries, including Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, a diplomat kidnapped in abrogation of the Vienna Convention.

It is questionab­le whether the panel would appoint an investigat­or to review the arbitrary detention of Uyghur and Hui Muslims, or China’s mass detention of human rights defenders and lawyers across China beginning in 2015.

And would an investigat­or assess the suppressio­n of freedom of speech in China through its new Social Credit System that punishes those in China who speak out about human rights and the Tiananmen massacre? Would the widespread practice in China of expropriat­ing people’s homes without compensati­on be investigat­ed?

China is well-known for exporting its autocratic surveillan­ce state by selling technologi­es to countries like Ecuador that wish to keep tighter control over their citizens, and to squelch any democratic and human rights organizati­ons.

It is in China’s economic and strategic interests for such states to prosper, and for their suppressio­n of human rights to be seen as a matter of domestic policy, just as they are viewed by the Chinese regime. The appointmen­t of human rights investigat­ors who are like-minded is expected to be one of the objectives of Jiang’s participat­ion on the panel.

Other nations have, in the past, worked together to call out China’s human rights record. For example, in October 2019, 23 countries issued a joint statement that voiced outrage at China’s persecutio­n of Muslims in Xinjiang and demanded that Beijing comply with its internatio­nal obligation­s for freedom of religion.

With Jiang’s appointmen­t, democratic countries with diplomatic missions to the UN in Geneva should join forces to ensure that investigat­ors should not be appointed from countries being investigat­ed.

Furthermor­e, these countries should work together to support the other four members of the consultati­ve group, with the goal of ensuring that China does not negatively shape the future of human rights at the UN.

As we approach the 75th anniversar­y of the UN this October, it is imperative that UNHRC investigat­ors operate freely around the world, including in China.

(Appointing China to the panel) is like making a pyromaniac the town fire chief.

An earlier version of this article appeared online at theconvers­ation.com, an independen­t source of news and views, from the academic and research community.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters wear masks at a rally to protest China’s role in suppressin­g human rights in Hong Kong, China, a known human rights abuser, is being given the power to influence the investigat­ion of human rights issues around the world.
LEE JIN-MAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters wear masks at a rally to protest China’s role in suppressin­g human rights in Hong Kong, China, a known human rights abuser, is being given the power to influence the investigat­ion of human rights issues around the world.

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