The Borneo Post

Veteran war crimes prosecutor urges reform of ‘disappoint­ing’ UN

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GENEVA, Switzerlan­d: Former war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte, who for years was part of a UN commission probing rights abuses in Syria, is calling for reform of the UN ‘talk shop’.

She also argued that the upholding of human rights had reached a low point, questionin­g if they still existed.

“The UN is a big disappoint­ment to me,” she told Swiss weekly NZZ Am Sonntag in an interview published Sunday, insisting that ‘ the UN should be reorganise­d’.

Del Ponte, a 71-year- old Swiss national who came to prominence investigat­ing war crimes in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, was part of the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria for five years, before slamming the door last year.

During her time working with the commission, which is tasked with investigat­ing human rights violations and war crimes in Syria’s brutal civil war, Del Ponte said she was disappoint­ed to find that the UN was basically a ‘ talk shop’.

“There are lots of civil servants, too many. Only a few of them really do any work,” she lamented.

Del Ponte, known for her frankness, reiterated her frustratio­n at the lack of accountabi­lity for the horrendous crimes committed in Syria, where more than 360,000 people have been killed since the conflict erupted in 2011.

“We had hoped that the Internatio­nal Criminal Court or an ad hoc court would deal with the war crimes in Syria,” she said, criticisin­g the blocked UN Security Council for standing in the way of such a process by ‘doing nothing’.

She also criticised the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. Half of the 47 countries that currently hold rotating membership, including the likes of China, Saudi Arabia and Burundi, “are violating human rights on a daily basis”, she maintained.

“They should be thrown out. Immediatel­y,” she said.

She joked that she had been asked at a recent event if she would consider becoming UN Secretary- General, a job she said she would gladly take.

“But I would probably not last in office for long.”

Del Ponte, who said she is planning to retire for good at the end of this year, warned that internatio­nal justice as a whole was currently in a sorry state.

“We have reached a low point,” she told the paper.

“Human rights are no longer valid. We have to ask ourselves today if they still exist,” she said.

But she stressed that “we have no choice but to believe in human rights.”

“We must believe that an independen­t internatio­nal court can bring justice.” — AFP

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