Del.icio.us
In the run-up to Wednesday's elections to the UN Human Rights Council, Nobel laureates Desmond Tutu, Adolfo Perez Esquivel, and Jimmy Carter have all issued statements opposing Sri Lanka's candidacy. The case against Sri Lanka, according to Tutu:
Sri Lanka has failed to honour its pledges of upholding human rights standards and cooperating with the UN since joining the council two years ago. Indeed, its human rights record has worsened during that time. The Sri Lankan idea of cooperation with the UN, meanwhile, has been to condemn senior UN officials (including the high commissioner for human rights, Louise Arbour, and the under secretary general for humanitarian affairs, John Holmes) as "terrorists" or "terrorist sympathisers."The systematic abuses by Sri Lankan government forces are among the most serious imaginable. Government security forces summarily remove their own citizens from their homes and families in the middle of the night, never to be heard from again. Torture and extrajudicial killings are widespread. When the human rights council was established, UN members required that states elected must themselves "uphold the highest standards" of human rights. On that count, Sri Lanka is clearly disqualified.
Opposition to Sri Lankan membership in the Council -- the successor to the Human Rights Commission, which was much-maligned for its regular inclusion of rights-abusing and abusive regimes -- does seem to have crystallized among NGOs and human rights activists. While the new Council is by no means a paragon of human rights monitoring -- passing more resolutions that condemned Israel than those that censured Sudan, for example -- the campaign to tighten the standards of countries accepted into the body reveals how far the Council has come. Last year, Belarus' candidacy flopped, deterring notorious human rights offenders like Sudan and Zimbabwe from even attempting to stand for election. Sri Lanka may well not be pleased with the negative attention is receiving, but ultimately, both the Human Rights Council and the human rights situation within Sri Lanka stand to benefit.
Posted by John Boonstra at 5:26 PM | Comments (5) | UN News
Del.icio.us
In case you missed Jeffrey Gettleman's stunning expose of the near-famine conditions in Somalia, it is worth a read:
Somalia -- and much of the volatile Horn of Africa, for that matter -- was about the last place on earth that needed a food crisis. Even before commodity prices started shooting up around the globe, civil war, displacement and imperiled aid operations had pushed many people here to the brink of famine.But now with food costs spiraling out of reach and the livestock that people live off of dropping dead in the sand, villagers across this sun-blasted landscape say hundreds of people are dying of hunger and thirst.
This is what happens, economists say, when the global food crisis meets local chaos.
"We're really in the perfect storm," said Jeffrey D. Sachs, a Columbia economist and top United Nations adviser, who recently visited neighboring Kenya.
There has been a collision of troubles throughout the region: skimpy rainfall, disastrous harvests, soaring food prices, dying livestock, escalating violence, out-of-control inflation, and shrinking food aid because of many of these factors.
The UN has branded the situation in Somalia a "humanitarian emergency" -- the final step before an official famine, which is likely just weeks away. This news only further accentuates the need for a credible peacekeeping force in Somalia, as well as continued investment in both humanitarian assistance and political negotiations. As Gettleman's article reminds us, the ramifications of famine cannot be divorced from the panoply of other factors exacerbating Somalia's plight. Across the border in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia, there are signs that the Ethiopian government is manipulating an equally dire food crisis to snuff out an insurgency. In Somalia's violent landscape, such a tactic is unfortunately not far from the realm of possibility.
Posted by John Boonstra at 11:00 AM | Comments (2) | Africa
Del.icio.us
In this edition of UN Plaza, I welcome Enough Campaign policy analyst Julia Speigel back to the program. We discuss her recent trip to Northern Uganda, where she monitored last month's peace talks between the government of Uganda and the rebel Lord's Resistance Army.
The peace talks stalled at the last minute when rebel leader Joseph Kony failed to show up to the signing ceremony. In the clip below, Julia discusses how the international community might pressure Kony to come back to the table. You can also read her excellent report on how to revive the peace process in Northern Uganda.
Posted by Mark Leon Goldberg at 10:17 AM | Comments (0) | Interviews
Del.icio.us
>>Myanmar - Today Myanmar agreed to open its doors to aid from Southeast Asian neighbors but will still restrict access to others. An estimated 2.5 million survivors are still in dire need of aid.
>>Iraq - An American sniper serving in Iraq has been sent home after it was discovered last week that he had used a Qur'an for target practice. Major General Jeffrey Hammond, the commander of U.S. troops in Baghdad, publicly apologized for the incident, which some Iraqi officers had threatened to quit over.
- UN Plaza: Faltering Peace in Northen Uganda
- Taking On Maternal Death, One Cause at a Time
- Over the Moon Over Somalia
- Bad News on World Economic Health
Africa
- Egypt - Bush Calls for Democratic Reform in Mideast Region
- South Africa - Southern Africa eyes visa-free regime
- Sudan - AU optimistic on Chad-Sudan relations after talks
- Kuwait - Islamists Win 24 of 50 Seats in Parliament of Kuwait
- Somalia - Pirates Seize Jordanian Ship Carrying Aid to Somalia
- Senegal - World Aid Agencies Faulted in Food Crisis
- Algeria - Berber riots rock Algerian town
- Ethiopia - Drought returns to haunt Ethiopia
- Ethiopia - Clean sweep for Ethiopian party
- U.S.A - US sniper shot at Koran in Iraq
- Venezuela - Colombia Denies Its Forces Entered Venezuela Illegally
- Mexico - Police chief steps down in Mexico
- Colombia - Top Farc commander surrenders
- China - Quake rescuers work against time
- China - China declares three days of mourning after quake
- Myanmar - UN chief to visit Myanmar
- Myanmar - Hopes for Myanmar cyclone aid rise as ASEAN meets
- Japan - Tokyo set to relax investment stance
- Malaysia - Malaysia ex-PM Mahathir quits ruling party UMNO
- Taiwan - New Taiwan president to take reins, court China
- Philippines - 9 die in Philippines blood feud
- Poland - Poland planning mass privatisations
- France - France says its envoy held talks with Hamas
- Italy - Neapolitans torch rubbish piles
Posted by Matthew Cordell at 10:05 AM | Comments (0) | Morning Coffee

RSS


