Philippine Daily Inquirer

RIGHTS COUNCIL IS UN’S ‘GREATEST FAILURE,’ US ENVOY HALEY SAYS

- —AFP

UNITED NATIONS— US Ambassador Nikki Haley on Wednesday described the Human Rights Council as the “greatest failure” of the United Nations as she defended the US decision to quit the UN body.

Haley told the Heritage Foundation think tank in Washington that the Geneva-based body had “provided cover, not condemnati­on, for the world’s most inhumane regimes.”

Short of promise

“Judged by how far it has fallen short of its promise, the Human Rights Council is the United Nations’ greatest failure,” she said.

The ambassador announced last month that the United States was quitting the council, accusing it of bias against Israel and condemning the “hypocrisy” of its members including China, Egypt, Venezuela and Cuba.

The Human Rights Council has been “not a place of conscience, but a place of politics,” Haley said, adding that it had focused its attention “unfairly and relentless­ly on Israel.”

Anti-Israel bias

US criticism stems from the fact that Israel is the only country that has a dedicated agenda item at council meetings, which means that Israel’s treatment of Palestinia­ns has regularly come under scrutiny.

Haley took aim at the council for failing to speak out in support of antigovern­ment protests in Iran, to condemn the violence in Venezuela and over the election of the Democratic Republic of Congo to the council after its security forces faced allegation­s of atrocities in the Kasai region.

Despite the US exit, “fixing the institutio­nal flaws” of the council remains “one of our biggest priorities” at the United Nations, Haley said.

The withdrawal followed strong UN criticism of US President Donald Trump’s policy to separate migrant children from their families at the US-Mexico border.

Watchdogs hit

Haley again took a swipe at rights groups like Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch for not backing the US bid to reform the council.

The nongovernm­ent organizati­ons had instead urged the US to seek reforms in Geneva by pushing for more competitio­n in elections for council seats.

The United States refused to join the body when it was created in 2006 but joined in 2009 under Barack Obama.

 ?? —AP ?? MISSION ACCOMPLISH­ED Malaysian police Ins. Gen. Mohamad Fuzi Harun talks to reporters in a file photo in May.
—AP MISSION ACCOMPLISH­ED Malaysian police Ins. Gen. Mohamad Fuzi Harun talks to reporters in a file photo in May.

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