Rights groups urge UN to reject Syrian candidacy
Rights groups urge UN Human Rights Council to reject Syrian candidacy at Friday session
For Immediate Release
Geneva, April 27 - An international coalition of 17 human rights groups, survivors of China's 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, and an Italian legislator today called on the UN Human Rights Council to use its urgent session on Syria's bloody crackdown this Friday to reject the Assad regime's controversial bid for a seat on the 47-nation body.
Led by UN Watch, an independent human rights monitoring group based in Geneva, the coalition of rights groups from Africa, Asia, the U.S. and Europe, also urged action from the UN Security Council and other international bodies to protect Syria's civilian population from government actions that it said may amount to "war crimes and crimes against humanity."
The election of 15 new council members is scheduled for May 20 at the UN General Assembly in New York. However, UN Watch executive director Hillel Neuer said that "if the council this week declares President Bashar al-Assad unwelcome as a member, it would sound the death knell for Syria's cynical candidacy to be elected a global judge of human rights."
The coalition called for leadership from US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, EU foreign minister Catherine Ashton, Ban Ki-moon, and UN rights chief Navi Pillay.
Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey was asked to convene the high contracting parties to the Geneva Conventions to address the Syrian army's grave assault on thousands of civilians who are protected as non-combatants under the treaties.
The appeal follows below.
International Coalition to Prevent Syria’s Election to the UNHRC
Objective
On May 20, 2011, the UN
General Assembly will hold a vote to fill 15 of the 47 UN
Human Rights Council seats, in the annual rotation of
membership. Syria has submitted its candidacy, and is
running on an uncontested, “closed list”—one of four
Asian Group candidates for the same amount of available
seats—and claims to have received the official
endorsement of the Asian Group. For the reasons set forth
below, the International Coalition urges UN stakeholders to
fulfill their international obligations and take all
necessary action to defeat Syria’s candidacy.
Election
Criteria
According to UNGA Resolution 60/251, which
established the UN Human Rights Council in 2006, General
Assembly members are obliged to elect states to the Council
by “tak[ing] into account the candidates’ contribution
to the promotion and protection of human rights and their
voluntary pledges and commitments made thereto.” The
resolution also provides that consideration ought to be
given to whether the candidate can meet the obligations of
Council membership, including the obligation “to uphold
the highest standards in the promotion and protection of
human rights.”
Human Rights Abuses
Under the above
criteria, Syria utterly fails to qualify for membership on
the Council. The claims made by Syria in its candidacy pledge are utterly false.
Syria under the Assad regime is a brutal police state that
over four decades has perpetrated gross and systematic
abuses of basic human rights against the citizens of Syria,
while sponsoring terrorism abroad.
In recent weeks, as diverse citizens in cities across Syria peacefully called for freedom, the Assad regime has responded with premeditated massacres against its own people, making indiscriminate use of live ammunition against defenseless citizens, including men, women and children.
Human rights activists in Syria report mass atrocities by government forces, with hundreds killed and thousands injured. For example, on March 23, security forces killed six protesters in the Omari mosque in Daraa, and opened fire on hundreds of youths. On April 17, security forces opened fire on mourners at a funeral, killing 17. On April 26, thousands of Syrian soldiers backed by tanks and snipers poured into the city of Daraa before dawn, opening fire indiscriminately on civilians, leaving many dead and injured. Thousands have been detained by the Assad regime across the country, subjected to brutal arrest and torture.
Accordingly, the government of Syria is committing gross and systematic violations of the right to life as guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and trampling freedom of expression and freedom of assembly.
War Crimes
and Crimes Against Humanity
The government of Syria is
committing crimes against humanity, as defined by the
Explanatory Memorandum to the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court. The Syrian government’s mass
killing of innocent civilians amounts to particularly odious
offences which constitute a serious attack on human dignity.
As confirmed by numerous testimonies collected by human
rights organizations and news agencies, the Assad regime’s
crimes against the civilian population are not isolated or
sporadic events. Rather, these constitute a widespread and
systematic policy and practice of atrocities, intentionally
committed, including murder, political persecution and other
inhumane acts which reach the threshold of crimes against
humanity. These atrocities constitute gross violations of
international human rights and humanitarian law on a
countrywide scale amounting to war crimes and crimes against
humanity.
Action to Protect Syria’s
Victims
Accordingly, in addition to defeating Syria’s
candidacy for the UNHRC, we urge all UN stakeholders,
including member states and high UN officials, to exercise
their responsibility to protect the people of Syria from
what are preventable crimes. We urge the use of all
available measures and levers to end atrocities throughout
the country. Specifically, we request the
following:
• The UN Security Council should meet
urgently to put an end to Syria’s assault on the civilian
population.
• The UN Human Rights Council
should use this Friday's Special Session on Syria to give
voice to the thousands of bloodied Syrian victims; launch an
international investigation to hold accountable President
Assad, other high officials of the regime and military
officers who may be guilty of war crimes and crimes against
humanity; and condemn Syria's outrageuous candidacy for
council membership.
• The UN General Assembly
should respond to Syria’s false declaration to it
about respecting human rights (A/65/784, dated 1 March 2011) with a
resolution stating the truth about the regime’s
atrocities.
• UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, US
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and EU Foreign Minister
Catherine Ashton should exercise global leadership in
initiating the above actions.
• UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay should
carefully consider whether the Syrian regime has exploited
their recent dialogue with her in order to buy time and
soften criticism; strongly condemn Syria’s gross and
systematic violations of human rights; take the lead by
publicly pressuring the Human Rights Council Special Session
to avoid repeating the May 2009 debacle where the council
praised Sri Lanka instead of condemning its atrocities; and
request that the human rights situation in Syria remain on
the council’s agenda until the regime is replaced by a
democratically elected government that respects universal
human rights.
• The UN’s Asian Group, including
the Jordanian chair, should rescind its endorsement of
Syria’s UNHRC candidacy and apologize to the regime’s
thousands of victims.
• Swiss President Micheline
Calmy-Rey should take action on behalf of the Government
of Switzerland to convene a conference of the high
contracting parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention on
measures to enforce the Convention to protect Syria’s
civilian population from assault by the country’s military
forces.
• International Criminal Court Prosecutor
Luis Moreno-Ocampo should be prepared to investigate
Syrian President Assad, other high regime officials and
military officers for war crimes and crimes against
humanity.
• Countries whose courts exercise
universal jurisdiction over war crimes and crimes
against humanity should arrest and prosecute Syrian
President Assad, other high regime officials and military
officers for their atrocities against the Syrian people.
1. Hillel C. Neuer, UN Watch , Switzerland
2.
Yang Jianli, Initiatives for China - Former prisoner of
conscience and survivor of Tiananmen Square
massacre
3. Matteo Mecacci — Member of Italian
Parliament, Nonviolent Radical Party, Rapporteur of the
Committee on Human Rights of the OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly
4. Yang Kuanxing, Yibao - Chinese
writer, original signatory to Charter 08, the manifesto
calling for political reform in China
5.
Francesca Restifo, Franciscans International,
Switzerland
6. Panayote Dimitras, Greek Helsinki
Monitor, Greece
7. Sharon Gustafson, International
Council of Jewish Women, USA
8. A. P. Gautam, Nepal ICU,
Nepal
9. Francois Ullmann, Ingenieurs du Monde,
France
10. Christina Fu, New Hope Foundation , USA
11. Bhawani Shanker Kusum, Gram Bharati Samiti (GBS),
India
12. Nguyen Le Nhan Quyen, Ligue Vietnamienne des
Droits de l’ Homme, Switzerland
13. Phil ya Nangoloh,
NamRights , Namibia
14. Nafsika Papanikolatos, Minority
Rights Group, Greece
15. Dieudonné Zognong, Fondation
Humanus, Cameroon
16. David Littman, World Union of
Progressive Judaism, Switzerland
17. Sylvia G. Iriondo,
MAR por Cuba (Mothers and Women against Repression),
USA
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