Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

When UN’s cash crisis undermines Human Rights, are the World’s Torturers the key beneficiar­ies?

- By Thalif Deen

The UN’s ongoing cash crisis, which has virtually destabilis­ed the Organisati­on’s day-to-day operations, has also undermined the human rights mandate of the Geneva-based Human Rights Council (HRC).

The HRC’s programme of work has been hindered by dwindling resources resulting in shorter working hours, cancellati­on of meetings, reduction in staff and leaving some of the UN Special Envoys investigat­ing human rights violations worldwide — grounded.

The new austerity measures, prompted by a shortfall in assessed contributi­ons from member states, came into force last October. But so far there are no signs of any significan­t improvemen­t.

Kyle Ward, Director, a. i., Human Rights Council and Treaty Mechanisms Division, Office of the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights ( OHCHR), told IPS that the human rights treaty bodies, establishe­d under the internatio­nal human rights convention­s, have been struggling with reductions in their overall regular budget resources, including a 25% reduction in travel resources for members (applied by the General Assembly in the last biennium), as well as reduced staffing, which has had already a serious impact on their ability to meet.

“Last year, with the financial crisis, it appeared that they would not be able to complete all of their sessions, until the UN Controller intervened and agreed to ensure we would have access to sufficient funds to enable them to meet”.

It was a bit touch-and-go, said Ward, “but for the most part we managed.”

But some of the work of the treaty bodies, he pointed out, was neverthele­ss blocked because of the shortfall in resources.

“The situation has unfortunat­ely not improved this year, as the main budgetary constraint­s remain – while the potential impact of a continuing liquidity crisis for the Organisati­on also remains a serious concern,” he warned.

Dr. Simon Adams, Executive Director of the Global Centre for the Responsibi­lity to Protect, told IPS the Human Rights Council and its mechanisms and the Geneva treaty bodies form an essential early warning system with regard to potential atrocity crimes.

“Starving the system of funds, and underminin­g its effectiven­ess, will only benefit those who prefer silence and inaction when it comes to human rights abuses and violations in the world today”, he added.

Moreover, he pointed out, “weakening the Human Rights Council only benefits torturers, atrocity perpetrato­rs and those who consider universal human rights to be an affront to the unrestrain­ed exercise of state power.”

Meanwhile, the Human Rights Council has been looking at efficiency measures for some time and had some success there, rearrangin­g its schedule to be able to reduce the number of its annual meetings.

But this is now being threatened by the Department of General Assembly and Conference Management (DGACM) due to the “special measures” arising from the cash flow crisis, with the refusal to provide interpreta­tion for any lunchtime meetings (which are essential – even in the reduced format – to enable the Council to cover its agenda in its ten allotted weeks per year).

The President of the Council, Ambassador Elisabeth Tichy- Fisslberge­r of Austria, has written to the Secretary-General to request that this be allowed notwithsta­nding – still waiting for an outcome, with the main annual session just a few weeks away.

Similarly, the restrictio­ns have also led DGACM to restrict the interpreta­tion services to the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) meetings beyond the two standard three-hour meetings per day, in order to save money.

The UPR has since the beginning allocated 3.5 hours to each State under review . . . so this will shave at minimum 15 minutes from each (given a 15-minute “courtesy” extension by the interprete­rs).

As this comes in the midst of the UPR Third cycle, there is some concern about equity in treatment to all States . . . but in reality, the statistics show that only 20% of the total have actually gone over 3h15 for their reviews, so the impact is not *that* extreme.

As it stands, in an effort to better manage cash flow, the Controller has decided (presumably in consultati­on with the SG) to allocate resources only on a quarterly basis (rather than the usual full allotment at the beginning of the year).

Although fully understand­able, says one staffer, it also difficult to manage as the work is not simply linear . . . “so for a number of important mandates we cannot manage on just 25% right now.”

The Commission of Inquiry on Syria is a case in point, as the current mandate is only through March – so they need 100% of their considerab­le 2020 resource requiremen­ts now.

Once again, the OHCHR will have to juggle resources and move allocation­s around in order to make this work as best it can, which is extremely inefficien­t and time-consuming.

“A more tailored approach to the situation would be unwieldy for the colleagues at UNHQ to manage across the entire Organisati­on, but it certainly feels like those of us at the operationa­l end are being made to bear the brunt of all the various “emergency” measures, making everything we are trying to accomplish even more difficult,” said another staffer.

In her letter to Guterres last month, Ambassador Tichy-Fisslberge­r said “the United Nations Office at Geneva (UNOG) has informed me that due to the special emergency measures you instituted last October to address the United

Nations’ liquidity crisis, the meetings of intergover­nmental bodies cannot be serviced outside of normal official hours”

It is furthermor­e of great concern that according to UNOG, they will be unable to service meetings of the upcoming 35th session of the Universal Periodic Review in accordance with Human Rights Council Decision 17/119 of 19 July 2011.

“When it establishe­d the Human Rights Council through resolution 60/251 of 15 March 2006, the General Assembly decided that the Human Rights Council should schedule no fewer than three sessions per year, for a total duration of no less than ten weeks,” the letter said.

As its programme of work has grown over the past 13 years, the Human Rights Council has often been obliged to schedule more than two meetings per working day in order to complete its programme of work.

Consequent­ly, a considerab­le number of lunchtime meetings have been required in recent years in order to deal with numerous thematic and country human rights crises.

“In 2016, the Director-General of UNOG and the Under- Secretary- General for General Assembly and Conference Management drew the attention of my predecesso­r to the growing dichotomy between the workload entailed in servicing the Council and the resources allocated to UNOG”, the letter adds.

In her letter, Ambassador Tichy-Fisslberge­r also said: “In your address to the Human Rights Council on 25 February 2019, you emphasised that “the Human Rights Council is the epicentre for internatio­nal dialogue and cooperatio­n on the protection of all human rights.”

In order for the Council to fulfil its responsibi­lities vis-àvis the internatio­nal community and carry out all of its mandated activities, some lunchtime meetings are necessary.

Should the Human Rights Council not be afforded the opportunit­y to meet, as is required by its programme of work, it would be prevented from fulfilling its responsibi­lities under General Assembly Resolution 60/251, and the work of the United Nations in the area of human rights, and the human rights cause as a whole, would suffer as a result.

The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen@ips.org

 ??  ?? A meeting of the Human Rights Council in Geneva. Credit: UN / Jean-Marc Ferré
A meeting of the Human Rights Council in Geneva. Credit: UN / Jean-Marc Ferré

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