Trump administration threatens to withdraw from the UN Human Rights Council
16/3/17
The Trump administration is reviewing membership in the UN
Human Rights Council, and has threatened to withdraw from the UN Human Rights
Council, arguing that the US wants to improve global human rights and defend
Israel.
Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson wrote in a letter to nine UN advocates and human rights groups that
the council must undergo “considerable reform for us [the US] to participate”
and that the US “continues to evaluate” the council's effectiveness.
Mr Tillerson, who has been
given authority as to how and when the US executes its funding cuts to the UN,
said he was concerned about the human rights record of other countries in
the 47-member council, such as China, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
He said the US will remain a member for the time being to
“reiterate our strong principled objection to the Human Rights Council’s biased
agenda against Israel.”
Israel and its supporters have accused the Human Rights
Council of disproportionately targeting the Jewish state with criticism while
overlooking abuses by other countries. From the council’s creation in June 2006
through June 2016, over half of its resolutions condemned Israel, according to
U.N. Watch, a watchdog that monitors criticism by the United Nations of the
Jewish state.
Last week, Israeli Defense
Minister Avigdor Liberman asked the Trump administration to pull out
of the Human Rights Council and conduct a review of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees.
“We may not share a common view on this, given the makeup of
the membership,” he added.
State Department spokesman Mark
Toner told journalists this week that he would not get into details about the
letter, first obtained by Foreign Policy.
“It’s fair to say we’re
having discussions about — and that’s internal discussions, meaning within the
State Department, but also with some of our partners — about how to increase
transparency and accountability in human rights,” Mr Toner said.
Former President George W
Bush refused to join the council in 2006 due to its treatment of Israel, but
the decision was reversed by President Barack Obama in 2009, who said it would
be better to have a seat at the table.
Congress was reportedly preparing legislation last month to
defund the UN after the organisation voted to condemn Israeli settlement
building in the Occupied Territories.
President Donald Trump has
long expressed his view that the US paid too much towards the UN, which amounts
to about $10 billion currently.
He also compared the UN to a
"country club" where people were having "a good time".
In January he was reportedly
preparing to sign an executive order which would reduce US funding of the UN by
40 per cent, as well as repeal certain multilateral treaties and scrap the
landmark Paris climate change agreement.
The order says that funding will be taken
away from any organisation that is "controlled or substantially influenced
by any state that sponsors terrorism" or is behind the persecution of
marginalised groups or systematic violation of human rights.
Foreign Policy reported this week that
State Department officials were ordered to cut US funding to the UN by up to 50
per cent.
Peacekeeping operations and
the United Nations Population Fund, which fights violence against women and
gender inequality, are set to be hit the hardest.
First details of the
billion-dollar cuts to the UN could be revealed this week in the US budget for
the year ahead, as the President explains how he will expand the military without
raising taxes.
Now, we could see how the U.S. support for the values of
human rights and democracy. They just join and support when things happen as
their wills and reject when there is not. So ridiculous!./.
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