Fight Against Terrorism Must Not Exclude Respect For Rights, UN Official Says
The struggle against terrorism must be reconciled with the imperatives of personal safety and dignity, the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has asserted.
"Respect for human rights and human security are inextricably linked," Louise Arbour, the newly appointed UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights, yesterday told the Geneva-based Human Rights Committee, which monitors compliance with
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Ms. Arbour cited as evidence various hotspots now under international scrutiny. "Afghanistan, Darfur, Iraq: these
examples show us that the prevention of, and solution to, conflicts depends on the implementation of fundamental human
right standards," she said.
The High Commissioner hailed the Committee's determination that the treaty is valid for troops serving in other
countries. "Your pronouncements on the applicability of the Covenant to national contingents of international
peacekeeping operations, as well as to multinational forces, and on the interdependence between principles of
humanitarian law and human rights law, are important and timely," she said.
Ms. Arbour, who served most recently on Canada's Supreme Court, said her experience there corroborated this finding. "We
concluded that the successful protection of citizens and the successful protection of their rights are not only
compatible with each other but are, indeed, interdependent," she said.
"There can be no genuine personal security if rights are in peril, any more than legal guarantees can exist in an
environment of fear and anarchy," she stressed.
The High Commissioner recalled that since 2001, the expert panel has examined "how anti-terrorism regulations may
operate to undermine Covenant guarantees."
UN human rights bodies, she observed, provide "a crucial supplement to the work of the Security Council's
Counter-Terrorism Committee."
Ms. Arbour took over her post from Sergio Vieira de Mello, who was killed along with 21 others in a terrorist attack on
the UN's headquarters in Baghdad last August.