The Philippine Star

Phl votes with China on HR resolution

- By PIA LEE-BRAGO

The Philippine­s has voted in favor of a China-led resolution in the United Nations, which the United States described as an instrument that weakens respect for human rights.

The resolution calls for upholding multilater­alism and working together to promote “mutually beneficial cooperatio­n,” as it suggested that government­s could agree on “win-win” exceptions to human rights concerns.

Adopted by a vote of 28 in favor, one against and 17 abstention­s, the UN Human Rights Council on Friday adopted the resolution titled “Promoting Mutually Beneficial Cooperatio­n in the Field of Human Rights.”

The 28 countries that voted in favor were the Philippine­s, Angola, Brazil, Burundi, Chile, China, Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iraq, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,

Senegal, South Africa, Togo, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela.

The US voted against while Afghanista­n, Australia, Belgium, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Hungary, Japan, Peru, South Korea, Rwanda, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerlan­d, Ukraine and the United Kingdom abstained.

Yu Jianhua, head of the Chinese mission to the UN headquarte­rs in Geneva, introduced the resolution to the council, saying that to achieve the goal of universal human rights, all countries need to firmly establish the concept of win-win cooperatio­n.

“All peoples lived on the same Earth and faced common challenges. China had cosponsore­d this resolution for mutually beneficial cooperatio­n in promoting and protecting human rights,” China said.

It added that it “strongly believed that the Human Rights Council should be guided by the principles of universali­ty, impartiali­ty, objectivit­y and non-selectivit­y for greater cooperatio­n, capacity building and technical assistance, in order to build a new type of internatio­nal relations, which reflected the times.”

Beijing explained that China’s contributi­ons and that of other countries to global human rights governance were in this direction.

It thanked all parties who had demonstrat­ed a cooperativ­e attitude after saying that Beijing would regret if any country would oppose it just because it was put forth by China.

“China hoped countries would refrain from the ‘zerosum’ game and hoped that all member states would participat­e in consensus,” it said.

Those who welcomed the adoption of the resolution said China has always advocated that human rights be protected through cooperatio­n and communicat­ion rather than criticism and accusation.

‘No’ vote

In explaining its “no” vote, the US said: “It was clear that China was attempting through this resolution to weaken the United Nations human rights system and the norms underpinni­ng it.”

“The ‘feel good’ language about ‘mutually beneficial cooperatio­n’ was intended to benefit autocratic states at the expense of people whose human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms all were obligated, as states, to respect. For these reasons, the US was calling for a vote and would vote against this resolution, and encouraged all other countries not to support this resolution,” the US said in a statement.

In a statement on the key outcomes of US priorities at the UN Human Rights Council’s 37th Session in Geneva, it explained that the resolution “sought to weaken internatio­nal human rights frameworks by demanding that government­s be ‘respected’ (i.e. not have their human rights records criticized) and suggesting that government­s could agree on ‘win-win’ exceptions to human rights concerns.”

 ?? MIGUEL DE GUZMAN ?? Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas deputy governor Diwa Guinigundo presents the new generation currency coin series during a press conference in Manila yesterday.
MIGUEL DE GUZMAN Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas deputy governor Diwa Guinigundo presents the new generation currency coin series during a press conference in Manila yesterday.

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