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Commission on Human Rights comes to an End

The Commission on Human Rights met on Monday, March 27th, in Geneva for its 62nd Session. Normally, the Commission meets for a period of six weeks to review reports from Special Rapporteurs, engage with interventions from governments and NGOS, and renew human rights mandates whose term is about to expire. On this occasion, however, because of the politics of the evolving situation in regard to the new Human Rights Council the 62nd Session was brief and procedural. It lasted all of three hours on Monday.

Two members of the Edmund Rice Network were present, Donal Leader, the Christian Brothers Coordinator for Advocacy and Justice, and Damien Norris from the Edmund Rice Centre in Fremantle.

It was a very orchestrated affair. Five Ambassadors, representing the five UN regional groupings, spoke on the achievements of the Commission during its sixty-year run. All were positive and affirming, with only a few oblique references to the failure of the Commission to advance the human rights agenda because of the intransigence and political obstructionism of governments hostile to human rights scrutiny.

Chris Sidoti, on behalf of the NGOs, gave a very brave speech. His call for a moment's silence to honour the victims of human rights abuses was taken up by the Commission Chairperson, the Ambassador from Peru. This was a very moving moment, albeit tinged with an inevitable cynicism. Looking around the room, one could not but be struck by the irony that many of the countries joining in the act of solidarity are among the world's most egregious human rights abusers.

In his closing remarks, the Chairperson recalled the words of Sergio Veira De Mello, the UN representative who was assassinated in Bagdad in 2003, that we must accept that all countries and governments are on a journey together, even if divided by very wide disparities in human rights observance, towards achieving a world where human rights will prevail universally. Only the acceptance of the truth and reality of this journey can protect us from a paralysing cynicism and despair.

Let us hope that the new Human Rights Council will be effective for the voiceless and the vulnerable in our world.
Let's keep hope alive.