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Thursday 3 March 2011

9 months ago we watch in disbelieve as Qaddafi was made as a world judge of human rights... just Incredible and sickening!!!

 Nine months after shamefully electing the Qaddafi regime to its Human Rights Council thanks to a PRESSURE from his loving oil, short sighted, and self interest friends in the West , the UN reversed itself and suspended Libya's membership. From the moment the Libyan regime declared its candidacy last year, we watch in disbelieve as Qaddafi was made as a world judge of human rights... just Incredible and sickening!!!
Renaud Sarda 

Reversal: UN ousts Qaddafi from human rights council

GENEVA, March 1 – Nine months after shamefully electing the Qaddafi regime to its Human Rights Council, the UN today reversed itself and suspended Libya’s membership. Click here for details.
From the moment the Libyan regime declared its candidacy last year, UN Watch initiated the opposition to Qaddafi sitting as a world judge of human rights. Click here for chronology of UN Watch’s tireless campaign.
In September, when the Libyan regime took its seat, UN Watch launched a campaign demanding Libya’s suspension from the Geneva-based Council, becoming the first voice to do so. We were supported by 27 human rights groups, a number thatsurpassed 80 in our renewed NGO appeal of nine days ago.
Most powerfully, to support the campaign, victims and relatives of victims showed great courage in accepting UN Watch’s invitation to challenge the Libyan regime at the council and confront their oppressor. On this day, UN Watch pays tribute to these victims — and the partner organizations which signed our appeals –  by reprinting the September briefing below. The victim testimonies are worth hearing. Tragically, the UN refused to heed their pleas, until the mass killings of last week became unbearable.
Yesterday we shared these quotes from the media’s global coverage of UN Watch’s campaign. Today, UN Watch analysis was again featured at length in the Wall Street JournalFOX News, the Malaysia Sun, Canada’s National Post, and the blog ofCommentary Magazine. Minutes ago, the Vancouver Sun reported:
“The election of Libya to the world’s top human rights body last May was a shameful act that bolstered Gadhafi’s regime, demoralized his victims, and stained the reputation of the United Nations,” said Montrealer Hillel Neuer, executive director of Geneva-based UN Watch, which has led a campaign by international activist groups to remove Libya from the council.
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Vol. 251  |  September 16, 2010
UN Watch Launches Global Campaign to Oust Qaddafi Regime from UN Human Rights Council
Geneva, September 16 - Only days after Libya took its seat for the first time as a newly elected member of the 47-nation UN Human Rights Council, UN Watch today launched a global campaign to remove it, bringing some of the world’s most well-known victims of Libyan crimes to testify before the assembly of country representatives.
Bulgarian nurse Kristyana Valchyeva (click for video) and Palestinian doctor Ashraf El Hagoug (click for video) took the floor to speak about their suffering as medical workers in Libya who were framed, imprisoned and tortured over false charges of infecting 400 children with HIV.
Speaking on behalf of Freedom House and UN Watch, the two were repeatedly interrupted by the Libyan delegate, who attempted to stop their testimony by making vociferous objections which were then echoed by speakers from Iran, China, Cuba and Venezuela.
However, the United States representative rallied to the defense of UN Watch’s witnesses, insisting on their right to speak freely, as did Belgium for the European Union, Britain, and Ireland.
As a result, amid heated exchanges between the repressive regimes and the democratic alliance, the president of the council, Ambassador Sihasak Phuangketkeow of Thailand, eventually allowed UN Watch’s invited victims to complete their testimony.
In addition, UN Watch today organized a press conference and a NGO panel, featuring the two torture victims together with Bob Monetti of the Pan Am 103 Victims Association (click for video), and Mohamed El Jahmi (click for video), brother of the late Libyan dissident Fathi El Jahmi — both of whom are scheduled to testify tomorrow before the plenary.
At the events, UN Watch released the appeal signed by 27 NGOs. The campaign invokes Article 8 of the council charter allowing for suspension of member states that commit systematic violations of human rights.
From today’s protest campaign:
  • Joint Appeal to Remove Libya Signed by 27 NGOs“The election of the Libyan Arab Jamahariya to the UN Human Rights Council is an outrage to the global human rights community. Given its notorious record as one of the world’s worst violators of human rights, the Qaddafi regime’s membership on the Council flies in the face of the United Nations’ promise, enshrined in Resolution 60/251 (2006), to elect member states that are committed to the promotion and protection of human rights.” Read more
  • Voice of America Reports on UN Watch Campaign“An overwhelming majority of U.N. member states elected Libya to the 47-member Council in May. U.N. Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer calls this an outrage. He says it sends the wrong message to what he calls the victims of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.  More
  • Palestinian Doctor Challenges Council on Including Libya“Our trials were seriously flawed. The confessions obtained by torture were used and admitted in court against us. Evidence by experts on HIV was disregarded by the Libyan courts. Mr. President, in the name of universal human rights, how can Libya be elected a member of the Human Rights Council?”  Read more
______________________________________________________
Effort Launched to Remove Libya from UN Human Rights Council
Voice of AmericaBy Lisa Schlein, Geneva
16 September 2010
A global coalition of human rights groups is launching a campaign to remove Libya from the 47-member U.N. Human Rights Council.
A coalition of 27 non-government human rights groups, joined by victims of Libyan human rights violations, are protesting the membership of what they call one of the world’s worst human rights violators in the U.N. body that is supposed to uphold and protect the rights of people around the world.
Human rights observers agree with Palestinian physician Ashraf El Hajouj who says that he and five Bulgarian nurses were framed, imprisoned and tortured in Libya for almost nine years on false charges of poisoning children with HIV. “Actually, we are the victims, the hidden victims of the Pan Am 103 [bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988] because the two cases – the HIV case and the Pan Am case – were going in the parallel way and almost all the politicians, they were denying this connection,” El Hajouj said.
El Hajouj questions the real motive behind the release of the Lockerbie bomber from prison last year on compassionate grounds. Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi was freed because he was diagnosed with prostate cancer and given three months to live. He now resides in Libya.
Lockerbie Victims Association member Bob Monetti also questions al-Megrahi’s early release. His 20-year-old son, Rick, was one of 270 people killed when Pan Am Flight 103 exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988.
He says he knows al-Megrahi did not act alone, but that his guilt was proven and his conviction was correct.
“In 2003, Libya finally accepted responsibility for the bombing of Pan Am 103 and a letter was sent to the United Nations. Hearing that Libya was responsible for the bombing and knowing that at least one murderer was in jail in Scotland gave some consolation and some sort of closure to the victims. The compassionate release last year by the Scots and the circus that followed ended that with a thud,” Monetti said.
The groups campaigning to oust Libya from the U.N. Human Rights Council are angry that the United Nations has given no official reaction to the release of the Lockerbie bomber.
An overwhelming majority of U.N. member states elected Libya to the 47-member Council in May.
U.N. Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer calls this an outrage. He says it sends the wrong message to what he calls the victims of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.
“Number one, we refuse to accept this result and number two, the procedure allows it,” Neuer said. “The procedure says Article 8 of the Resolution of 2006 that governs the Human Rights Council provides that a country that systematically violates human rights can be suspended.”
Two-thirds of the 47 members on the council need to vote to remove Libya from the forum. Neuer says this is unlikely to happen. Nevertheless, he says the campaign will continue.
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Testimony at the UN

Libyan Dissident Asks UN:
"Why is Qaddafi on the Human Rights Council?"
UN Human Rights Council, 15th SessionStatement by Freedom House, Sponsored by UN Watch
Delivered by Mohamed Eljahmi
Geneva, 20 September 2010

Mr. President,

This Council was created with the promise to elect countries that promote and protect human rights.

We ask: Does the UN’s election of Libya live up to this promise?

For me, this question is not academic. My late brother, Fathi Eljahmi, was a heroic dissident in Libya.

Under the rule of Mr. Qadhafi, membership in political parties or independent labor unions are crimes punishable by death. The fulfillment of citizens’ needs is tied to their absolute loyalty to Mr. Qadhafi.

Ordinary Libyans are accountable to a vast security apparatus. Their actions are scrutinized by Orwellian institutions, punishable by ruthless death squads.

Despite the danger, my brother Fathi chose to speak out for free speech and human rights. He was a courageous man. He was also my mentor and a father figure. He was an unconditionally loving and generous husband, son, and brother. Fathi was blessed with a great mind and a passion for equality and justice.

In 2002, he publicly set out his vision for a constitution, free speech, free enterprise, and an investigation into the massacre of 1200 prisoners at Abu Slim.

As a result, the government imprisoned Fathi for 17 months, until then-Senator Biden, who is now the US Vice President, interceded on his behalf. As soon as he was released, Fathi again spoke out for freedom and human rights. Two weeks later, he was sent back to prison, and subjected to five years of intense torture and isolation, leading to his death on May 21, 2009.

My family asks: When will this council establish an international investigation into my brother’s imprisonment, torture and death?

Why is the government of Mr. Qadhafi, which tortured and killed my brother—and which is one of the world’s worst violators of human rights—now an elected member of the UN Human Rights Council?

When will this council do the right thing, and stand with the Libyan people, to defend their human rights?

Thank you, Mr. President.
LIBYA RESPONDS IN RIGHT OF REPLY

(trascription from English interpretation provided by the UN)
Libya (Ambassador Ibrahim Aldredi): Thank you, Mr. President. I am making this statement to respond to the statements by certain irresponsible and imperious-type NGOs which are trying to put the work of the Council and to immobilize people using allegations which are really groundless and contentious.  Mr. President, we would like the interventions by such NGOs to be deleted from the record -- last Thursday’s intervention, and some this afternoon. These should be deleted because they are interventions which are incompatible with our procedures.

United States (interrupts with Point of Order): We would like to highlight that the U.S. believes that accredited NGOs must be permitted to speak, and that their speeches be included in the record. As you know, the voices of civil society are extremely important to the work of this council. Though member states, including the United States, may occasionally disagree with the content of their statements, the council should cultivate an environment of openness where we can discuss our differences. Thank you.

Libya: I would state to the honorable Council that this should not be a forum for all sorts of allegations when they are baseless and not grounded in truth. The Libyan Arab Jamahariya under Muammar Al-Qaddafi was honored to be elected to the Council, and the positive role of Libya was estimated in Africa and throughout the world with a view to strengthening human rights. My delegation is fully prepared to cooperate with you, even if other members are not, to promote the work of the council, to ensure it is a genuine forum for protecting fundamental human rights and freedoms.

Human Rights Council President (Ambassador Sihasak Phuangketkeow of Thailand): We take note of the points you raised.

Libya: We are not against the participation of NGOs, only against irresponsible statements by irresponsible NGOs.
(Translation from the original speech in Arabic)
Libya (Ambassador Ibrahim Aldredi)Thank you Mr. President, this statement is meant to clarify things. In order to serve political purposes for specific intentions, some irresponsible, imperialist in nature and with Zionist affiliation NGOs are trying to distort the work of this honorable Council. They recruit some individuals to give testimonies which have no basis of truth and serve political purposes for specific intentions. We hope Mr. President that you instruct the secretariat to delete the statements of these NGOs, who spoke about my country this evening and on Thursday September 16, 2010 from the broadcast and from the Council’s sessions. They should be deleted because they didn’t adhere to following the basis of discussions in our honorable Council or for lack of adherence to the UN’s discussion format.

[US interrupted with Point of Order]
Libya: Mr. President, our honorable Council shouldn’t be a place for fabricated testimonies or lies, which the claimants are trying to delude the Council with what is baseless and untruthful. My country is bigger than this nonsense and the Great Jamaheerya under the Leadership of the Brother Leader Muammar Qadhafi was honored by the entire world with its membership in the Human Rights Council. This was done as a token of appreciation for Libya’s international role in supporting peace and security, specifically on the African Continent and for its participation in the protection and promotion of human rights. And my country’s delegation is fully ready to work with you, Mr. President, and the rest of the membership to raise the work of this Council to higher levels and make it a forum to promote human rights and basic rights. Thank you Mr. President.

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