The Jerusalem Post

US reelected to spot on UNHRC after Trump-era departure

Top Republican on Senate Foreign Relations Committee pans ‘lending legitimacy’ to body that ‘persecutes’ Israel

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

The UN General Assembly elected the United States to the Geneva-based Human Rights Council on Thursday, more than three years after the Trump administra­tion quit the 47-member body over its chronic bias against Israel and a lack of reform.

The US, which was unopposed, received 168 votes in the secret ballot of the 193-member General Assembly. It begins a three-year term on January 1, pitting Washington against Beijing and Moscow, which began council terms this year. US President Joe Biden took office in January, pledging that human rights would be the center of his foreign policy, and his administra­tion has not shied away from criticizin­g China over Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Taiwan, while also calling out Russia.

“The United States should not be lending its legitimacy to a body that includes perpetrato­rs of human rights abuses like China, Venezuela and Cuba,” said Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho), ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “Additional­ly, the council continues to disproport­ionately spend the majority of its time and attention persecutin­g our ally Israel. The Biden administra­tion will pat itself on the back for rejoining this flawed body.

However, it will have done so without securing any necessary reforms, while failing to support human rights around the world.”

US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Washington would initially focus on “what we can accomplish in situations of dire need, such as in Afghanista­n, Burma, China, Ethiopia, Syria and Yemen. Our goals are clear: stand with human rights defenders and speak out against violations and abuses of human rights.”

Israel is set to lose three major supporters in January – Austria, the Czech Republic

US, Israeli views grow closer as patience thins on Iran, Page 4

and Denmark – but it gains Lithuania and the US.

Israel is the only country that is a permanent item on

the UNHRC’s agenda, and the only country to be targeted with a permanent commission of inquiry into alleged war crimes, establishe­d earlier this year.

Hillel Neuer, director of UN Watch, said that following Thursday’s election, only 31.9% of the UNHRC’s members are free democracie­s.

“Elections were designed to weed out the world’s worst rights abusers,” Neuer said. “But oppressive regimes like China, Cuba, Libya, Russia and Eritrea routinely win elections, and the stamp of internatio­nal legitimacy.”

Human Rights Council candidates are elected in geographic­al groups to ensure even representa­tion. There were no competitiv­e races on Thursday to elect 13 new members and reelect five members. Members cannot serve more than two consecutiv­e terms.

The General Assembly also elected Kazakhstan, Gambia, Benin, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Malaysia, Paraguay, Honduras, Luxembourg, Finland, Montenegro and Lithuania, while reelecting Cameroon, Eritrea, Somalia, India and Argentina on Thursday. The United States received the second-lowest number of votes, beating only Eritrea, which received 144 votes. •

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