UN rights chief must clarify endorsement of Arab charter with anti-Semitic provisions
Geneva, Jan. 28 - In a letter sent today to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour, UN Watch urged her to clarify a recent
endorsement of the Arab Charter of Human Rights, which contains several provisions that promote classically anti-Semitic
themes.
"We trust that Ms. Arbour was not aware of its contents, but this must be made clear, and the responsible person in her
office must be held fully accountable," said Hillel Neuer, executive director of the Geneva-based monitoring
organization.
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FULL TEXT OF UN WATCH LETTER
Her Excellency Louise Arbour
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Palais Wilson
Geneva, Switzerland
January 28, 2008
Dear Madame High Commissioner,
We commend you for your statement of January 27, 2008, recognizing the current dangers of racism and anti-Semitism. We
are concerned, however, by your statement of a few days earlier, dated January 24, 2008, welcoming the entry into force
of the Arab Charter on Human Rights. We trust that you were not aware of the blatantly anti-Semitic statements contained
in that charter, as described below. We urge you to issue a clarification on this matter. We also urge you to hold
accountable any members of your Office who were or should have been aware of, but failed to call your attention to,
these racist provisions.
"Rejecting all forms of racism and Zionism, which constitute a violation of human rights and a threat to international
peace and security," forms part of the opening preamble of the Arab Charter of Human Rights. Article 2 goes further and
calls for the outright elimination of Zionism: "All forms of racism, Zionism and foreign occupation and domination
constitute an impediment to human dignity and a major barrier to the exercise of the fundamental rights of peoples; all
such practices must be condemned and efforts must be deployed for their elimination."
As you know, Zionism is the movement for Jewish self-determination and asserts the inherent and
internationally-acknowledged right of Israel to exist. A text that equates Zionism with racism, describes it as a threat
to world peace, as an enemy of human rights and human dignity, and then urges its elimination, is blatantly
anti-Semitic.
We recall that in June 2004, former Secretary-General Kofi Annan described the UN General Assembly's 1975 "Zionism is
racism" resolution--which was repealed in 1991--as a low-point of the UN's record on anti-Semitism. In 1975, when that
odious text was adopted, Andrei Sakharov, the late Soviet dissident and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said the resolution
would "contribute to anti-Semitic tendencies in many countries, by giving them the appearance of international
legality." We fear that the Arab Charter does the same.
These provisions cannot be dismissed as harmless rhetoric. When Syria signed the Arab Charter in 2006, its
state-controlled SANA news agency expressly cited these provisions. Agence France Presse reported as follows, on August
18, 2006: "In an obvious swipe at Israel, the [SANA] agency recalled that the text 'considers military occupation,
Zionism and all forms of racism and foreign domination as a basic obstacle to the fundamental rights of peoples and
underlines the need to condemn and suppress them.'" In other words, these provisions are hardly considered marginal.
Accordingly, first, we urge you to issue a clarification. Your January 24 statement described the text as an important
step in helping strengthen the enjoyment of human rights, and talked about the monitoring of its provisions. We believe
that even if the Arab Charter may contain other, constructive provisions, nothing can justify any endorsement of a text
with such hateful language, language that has been thoroughly disowned by the United Nations in 1991.
Second, we urge you to hold accountable any members of your Office who were or should have been aware of, but failed to
call your attention to, these racist provisions. We note that the odious language of the preamble is published on your
Office's website (http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/compilation_democracy/arabcharter.htm). We also note that a
newsletter published by your Office on March 15, 2004 expressly recognized "the language in the Charter related to
Zionism" as a "contentious issue." (This is available at http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/docs/Issue%20Nr%201+.pdf).
Consequently, it appears that one or more members of your Office may have been aware of the anti-Semitic language in the
text, but failed to call this to your attention prior to your statement. These individuals should be held to account.
This is a time when racism and anti-Semitism are raising profound concerns around the world. As you know, the government
of Canada, in a decision last week that was supported by parliamentary parties across the political spectrum, announced
that it will not participate in the upcoming Durban Review Conference, based on concerns that the preparatory process
would fail to remedy the "open and divisive expressions of intolerance and anti-Semitism" that characterized the
original 2001 gathering. As Secretary-General of the Conference, with responsibility for its preparations, we trust that
you will uphold the values of the UN Charter by acting immediately and forcefully to oppose any such language if and
when it is introduced.
Again, we commend you for your statement yesterday regarding anti-Semitism, and thank you for your prompt attention to
this matter.
Sincerely,
Ambassador Alfred H. Moses
Chairman
Hillel C. Neuer
Executive Director
www.unwatch.org
UN Watch is a Geneva-based human rights organization founded in 1993 to monitor UN compliance with the principles of its
Charter. It is accredited as a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in Special Consultative Status to the UN Economic and
Social Council (ECOSOC) and as an Associate NGO to the UN Department of Public Information (DPI).
ENDS