10 Regimes That ‘Repress Human Rights Activists’ Elected to UN Committee on Human Rights Groups

10 Regimes That ‘Repress Human Rights Activists’ Elected to UN Committee on Human Rights Groups
The U.N. Security Council Chamber is seen during preparation for a session at the United Nations Conference Building in New York on Aug. 25, 2016. Golden Brown/Shutterstock
Katabella Roberts
Updated:

The United Nations has elected 10 regimes that “repress human rights activists” to its 19-nation committee on nongovernmental organizations, according to UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer.

Neuer took to Twitter on April 14 to announce the regimes that had been elected to the committee on NGOs—which oversees the work of human rights groups across the globe—by members of the U.N. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).

Members of ECOSOC voted on April 13 to elect 19 members in total, from five regional groups, who will serve on the committee for the next four years beginning this year.

Those 19 members will act as the “gatekeepers for civil society at the UN as they decide which NGOs receive UN accreditation participation rights,” according to the International Service for Human Rights, an independent NGO that promotes and protects human rights.

Neuer, the director of the Geneva-based human rights organization UN Watch, said that China, Cuba, Turkey, Zimbabwe, Nicaragua, Eritrea, Pakistan, Algeria, Bahrain, and Cameroon have been elected to the committee.

Neuer, also an international lawyer and human rights activist, said the decision to elect those specific countries means they will effectively wield more power when it comes to blocking the accreditation of organizations that aim to highlight the various human rights violations that occur in their countries.

“This means dictatorships will have a majority on the committee in order to deny United Nations accreditation to any independent organizations in the world that call out their human rights violations and to accredit fake front groups created by the regimes,” he said.

“The problem with the U.N. is that those fighting hardest to join its various human rights committees are those most committed to the opposite,” he said in a follow-up post.

Referencing prominent Chinese human rights activist and lawyer Ding Jiaxi, as well as political activists Felix Maradiaga and Dawit Isaak—all of whom have been jailed in various countries—Neuer said the regimes that jail human rights activists “want the power to oversee human rights groups.”

United Nations officials didn’t respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment.

For years, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been accused of human rights violations, including forced organ harvesting and the imprisonment of more than 1 million Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in internment camps, where they’re allegedly subjected to torture, forced labor, and forced sterilization.

In Iran, those who peacefully exercise their human rights are often punished with harsh penalties such as detainment and public flogging.

Various other countries that are now members of the committee have also separately been accused of violating human rights.

Liberia, Mozambique, India, Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Israel, the United Kingdom, and the United States also were elected as members of the NGO Committee.

Meanwhile, Russia lost in all of the elections that took place on April 13 pertaining to U.N. bodies, including a spot on the committee on NGOs.

Russia had been a member of the NGO committee since its establishment in 1947, and the decision to vote it out came as Moscow has become increasingly isolated from the West in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine.

Ukraine’s representative to the U.N., Sergiy Kyslytsya, announced Russia’s election defeats on Twitter.
Katabella Roberts
Katabella Roberts
Author
Katabella Roberts is a news writer for The Epoch Times, focusing primarily on the United States, world, and business news.
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