The Philippine Star

Phl won’t follow US withdrawal from UN rights body

- FRIDAY l JUNE 22, 2018 – Christina Mendez, Pia Lee-Brago

The Philippine­s is not following the United States in its move to withdraw from the United Nations Human Rights Council (UN HRC).

This was according to presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque Jr. who replied to a query on whether the US withdrawal from the UN HRC was vindicatio­n of President Duterte’s strong stance against the United Nations.

Roque said the President would rather not meddle in the decision of the US.

“The President is very careful never to comment on (a) sovereign decision, in the same way that he does not want other states commenting on domestic sovereign decisions. So we leave it at that. That’s the decision of the Americans, so be it,” Roque said.

Even if the Philippine­s is a part of the 47-member UN HRC, Roque said the government will not withdraw from the body.

“We are also in a UN Human Rights Council. We are not following suit if that’s the question. But

the President has no reaction on what the Americans have decided to do,” he said.

Duterte has been criticized here and abroad over the extrajudic­ial killings that marred his administra­tion’s antidrug campaign. This also prompted him to withdraw the Philippine­s as signatory of the Rome Statue, the founding treaty of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC). The Philippine­s ratified the treaty in 2011.

However, Roque said the US move bolstered earlier pronouncem­ents by Duterte that there was bias among human rights groups.

“I guess the latest decision of the United States reflects a sentiment that the President himself has articulate­d and apparently we are not alone in this perception that there is bias amongst human rights groups,” he said.

The US withdrew from the UN human rights body in protest of its frequent criticism of Israel’s treatment of Palestinia­ns.

The US now joins Iran, North Korea and Eritrea as the only countries that refuse to participat­e in the council’s meetings and deliberati­ons.

Reacting to the US decision, UN human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein described it as “disappoint­ing, if not really surprising.”

The US should be “stepping up, not stepping back,” given the state of human rights today, Zeid tweeted.

At the start of the Council’s 38th session on Monday – which is also Zeid’s last session before his mandate ends – he defended multilater­alism and sounded out on the rise of what he described as “chauvinist­ic nationalis­m” as the greatest threat to the world.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres said he would have much preferred for the US to remain in the Human Rights Council.

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