Medicine Hat News

UN council accredits religious rights group stalled by panel

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One of the U.N.’s main bodies voted Wednesday to grant accreditat­ion to a Britishbas­ed group that promotes religious freedom, overriding a U.N. committee that had deferred action on the matter for years.

Britain had argued that the Committee on Non-Government­al Organizati­ons, which decides what groups can participat­e in U.N. activities, is biased against human rights groups.

The 54-member Economic and Social Council voted 28-9 with 12 abstention­s to approve consultati­ve status for Christian Solidarity Worldwide, giving the group the right to attend open meetings and conference­s at the Genevabase­d Human Rights Council and other U.N. bodies.

The organizati­on had applied for U.N. accreditat­ion since 2009, but its applicatio­n was repeatedly deferred by the 19-member accreditat­ion committee. After the committee voted in February to again defer action, Britain launched a campaign to get the council to overturn the decision and accredit the group.

Britain’s U.N. ambassador, Matthew Rycroft, told the council before Wednesday’s vote that Christian Solidarity Worldwide had responded “fully and promptly” to more than 80 questions posed by committee members and met all the requiremen­ts for accreditat­ion. But, he said, “there has been repeated discrimina­tion against NGOs with a human rights focus in particular” by the committee.

Rycroft pointed to letters of support from U.N. investigat­ors on freedom of religion, freedom of expression and others for Christian Solidarity Worldwide, whose recent work includes supporting the rights of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar and civilians of all faiths caught in the conflict in Central African Republic.

In another slap at the accreditat­ion committee, the council voted 37-0 with 16 abstention­s to webcast all public meetings of the panel. The committee had resisted webcasting its public meetings even though that is a widespread practice at the United Nations.

The U.S. mission to the United Nations, which cosponsore­d the resolution on webcasting, issued a statement praising the vote.

“This change will bring to light those countries that seek to block United Nations access for organizati­ons that defend press freedom, that provide legal counsel for political prisoners, that document human rights abuses committed by their government­s, and that call out discrimina­tion of all kinds,” it said.

U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley said the vote would “bring increased transparen­cy and accountabi­lity to the United Nations.”

Christian Solidarity Worldwide works in more than 20 countries in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. Many of the nations that voted against granting accreditat­ion, including China, Russia, India, Pakistan, South Africa, Turkey, Venezuela, Vietnam and Burkina Faso, said the lower committee’s vote should stand, arguing that the group had not answered all questions from members.

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