Envoy Erin Barclay says relative indifference to ongoing abuses in Syria, North Korea undermining credibility of UN body
The
In
a speech before the Geneva-based council, US envoy Erin Barclay said
the United States’ commitment to human rights “is stronger than ever.”
“Regrettably, too many of the actions of this
council do not support these universal principles. Indeed, they
contradict them,” said Barclay, the US deputy assistant secretary of
state for international organization affairs.
She cited ongoing abuses in Syria and North
Korea, and noted in particular the top UN human rights body’s
“consistent, unfair and unbalanced focus” on Israel, which she said
“deeply troubled” Washington.
“No other nation is the focus of an entire
agenda item… The obsession with Israel… is the largest threat to this
council’s credibility,” said Barclay, a career diplomat. “It limits the
good we can accomplish by making a mockery of this council. The United
States will oppose any effort to delegitimize or isolate Israel.
“When it comes to human rights no country
should be free from scrutiny, but neither should any democratic country
be regularly subjected to unfair, unbalanced and unfounded bias,” she
added.
The council’s annual rebuke of Israel has been
a particular source of irritation for both Republican and Democratic US
administrations.
The US declined to seek a seat on the
47-member council when it was formed in 2006, citing skepticism about
the membership of some authoritarian states. It joined the council in
2009, after Obama’s election, and has played a key role rallying
like-minded nations in condemning human rights abuses around the globe.
She said the United States is dedicated to
protecting and promoting universal human rights, including freedom of
religion, freedom of assembly and freedom of speech.
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