organization:un human rights council

  • Greece bids for role in Israeli settler railway
    Adri Nieuwhof | 18 April 2019 | The Electronic Intifada
    https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/adri-nieuwhof/greece-bids-role-israeli-settler-railway

    The government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is attempting to solve Greece’s chronic economic and debt problems at the expense of Palestinian rights. Yonatan Sindel Xinhua

    Encouraged by the Greek government, state-owned public transport firm STASY is bidding for a role in the Jerusalem light rail, which links Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

    This would make the firms – and the Greek state – complicit in Israel’s illegal colonization.

    Greek and Israeli transport ministers signed an agreement to cooperate in transport sectors in 2017.

    This came after a summit between the leaders of Israel, Greece and Cyprus aimed at drawing the countries closer together.

    Lawmakers in Greece’s nominally left-wing ruling party Syriza are demanding to know why the government is supporting a Greek role in Israel’s colonial expansion.

    Metro workers union SELMA has also denounced STASY for its plan to bid for a role in the construction, operation and maintenance of the Israeli project.

    The light rail’s Green Line, which the Greek firm wants to be involved in, begins and ends in the occupied West Bank, SELMA stated last month. “This means that the Greek companies are directly engaged in supporting illegal Israeli settlements.”

    The union added that it is “completely against the participation in any illegal business activity of STASY, especially when it is about the violation of human rights and the just struggle of a people about its national existence and independence.”

    The union noted that the companies participating in the project face being included in the database mandated by the UN Human Rights Council of firms doing business in or with Israeli settlements in occupied territory.

    This could have “legal and judicial consequences,” the union warned. (...)

  • UN to review 7 resolutions against Israel in March
    Feb. 15, 2019 11:06 A.M. (Updated : Feb. 15, 2019 12:29 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=782560

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — The United Nations Human Rights Council is planning to issue seven resolutions against Israel during March, according to Israeli news outlets.

    Israeli Channel 2 reported that a report of the Commission of Inquiry into the “Gaza Fence” and the black list of businesses operating inside illegal Israeli settlements and beyond the Green Line will be among the resolutions to be made.

    The UN Special Coordinator’s report in the Palestinian lands will also be reviewed, in addition to the Goldstone Report of 2009 and Israeli violations in occupied Golan.

    Israeli violations of the International Law will also be reviewed by the UN Human Rights Council.

    #PalestineONU

  • #Venezuela crisis : Former UN rapporteur says US sanctions are killing citizens | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/venezuela-us-sanctions-united-nations-oil-pdvsa-a8748201.html

    Mr De Zayas, a former secretary of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) and an expert in international law, spoke to The Independent following the presentation of his Venezuela report to the HRC in September. He said that since its presentation the report has been ignored by the UN and has not sparked the public debate he believes it deserves.

    “Sanctions kill,” he told The Independent, adding that they fall most heavily on the poorest people in society, demonstrably cause death through food and medicine shortages, lead to violations of human rights and are aimed at coercing economic change in a “sister democracy”.

    #etats-unis #onu

  • Airbnb to remove listings in Jewish West Bank settlements - Israel News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/airbnb-to-remove-listings-in-jewish-west-bank-settlements-1.6662443

    Home-renting company Airbnb Inc said on Monday that it had decided to remove its listings in Jewish settlements in the West Bank, enclaves that most world powers consider illegal for taking up land where Palestinians seek statehood. In response, Israel’s Tourism Minister Yariv Levin instructed the ministry to restrict the company’s operations across the country.
    A statement on Airbnb’s website said: “We concluded that we should remove listings in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank that are at the core of the dispute between Israelis and Palestinians.” 
    It did not say when the decision, which according to Airbnb affects some 200 listings, would take effect. 
    Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan called on Airbnb hosts harmed by the decision to file lawsuits against the company in accordance with Israel’s anti-boycott law and said he’ll turn to senior U.S. officials to check if the company’s decision violated the anti-boycott laws “that exist in over 25 states.”
    He said that “national conflicts exist throughout the world and Airbnb will need to explain why they chose a racist political stance against some Israeli citizens.”

    The Yesha Council of settlements said in response that “a company that has no qualms about renting apartments in dictatorships around the world and in places that have no relationship with human rights is singling out Israel. This can only be a result of anti-Semitism or surrendering to terrorism – or both.”

    Levin demanded Airbnb cancel its “discrimantory” decision, saying it was a “shameful and miserable decision.”
    Top Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said that Airbnb should have included East Jerusalem and should have said settlements “are illegal and constitute war crimes.” He added: “We reiterate our call upon the UN Human Rights Council to release the database of companies profiting from the Israeli colonial occupation.”

    Airbnb came under Palestinian criticism for such listings, which some find misleading for failing to mention the property is on occupied land claimed by the Palestinians.
    The Palestinians say that by contributing to the settlement economy, Airbnb, like other companies doing business in the West Bank, helps perpetuate Israel’s settlement enterprise. 
    “There are conflicting views regarding whether companies should be doing business in the occupied territories that are the subject of historical disputes between Israelis and Palestinians,” the Airbnb statement said. 
    The statement continued: “In the past, we made clear that we would operate in this area as allowed by law. We did this because we believe that people-to-people travel has considerable value and we want to help bring people together in as many places as possible around the world. Since then, we spent considerable time speaking to various experts. We know that people will disagree with this decision and appreciate their perspective.”
    Oded Revivi, mayor of the West Bank settlement of Efrat and a representative of Yesha, described the Airbnb decision as contrary to its mission, as stated on the website, of “help(ing) to bring people together in as many places as possible around the world”. 
    Israel captured the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in the 1967 war and began building settlements soon after.
    While Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, the settler population in east Jerusalem and the West Bank has ballooned to almost 600,000. The Palestinians claim these areas as parts of a future state, a position that has wide global support.
    Airbnb said that as part of their decision-making framework, they “evaluate whether the existence of listings is contributing to existing human suffering” and “determine whether the existence of listings in the occupied territory has a direct connection to the larger dispute in the region.”
    The Associated Press contributed to this report

    #BDS

  • The strategies of the coalition in the yeman War.
    Aerial bombardment and food war.
    PDF : https://sites.tufts.edu/wpf/files/2018/10/Strategies-of-Coalition-in-Yemen-War.pdf

    This report gives an overview not available elsewhere of the impact
    of the Coalition bombing campaign on food production and
    distribution in rural Yemen and on fishing along the Red Sea coast.
    The timing of its release appears opportune. Press coverage of this
    forgotten war has increased; there is some diplomatic and political
    movement; and the report on human rights violations during the
    Yemen war, prepared under the aegis of the Group of Eminent Experts, has been submitted to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.¹
    Warnings of the risk of mass starvation echo ever more shrilly.²
    It is high time that citizens, parliamentarians and civil organisations
    to do all they can to end a conflict now well into its fourth year. On
    the 6 September, a new UN-appointed mediator had announced
    discussions between two major Yemeni parties in the war (the internationally
    recognized Government of Yemen led by Abd-Rabbuh
    Mansour Hadi, based between al-Riyadh and Aden, and the “Salvation/Rescue Government” of Ansarallah and allies based in Sanʿaʾ, internationally designated as “the Houthi rebels” or “the de-facto power”). Following this announcement, the talks were postponed in the wake of a failure to provide certain safe passage for the delegation from Sanʿaʾ.
    Mounting civilian casualties and recent atrocities resulting from
    Coalition bombing have brought press and political reaction to
    this long war.³ As part of the attack begun in June 2018 with the
    objective of taking the city of al-Hudayda, on 2 August the central
    fish market and the entrance to the main public hospital (to which
    wounded persons were being taken) were attacked.⁴ In the week

  • UN Human Rights Council passes a resolution adopting the peasant rights declaration in Geneva - Via Campesina
    https://viacampesina.org/en/un-human-rights-council-passes-a-resolution-adopting-the-peasant-right

    Seventeen years of long and arduous negotiations later, peasants and other people working in rural areas are only a step away from having a UN Declaration that could defend and protect their rights to land, seeds, biodiversity, local markets and a lot more.

    On Friday, 28 September, in a commendable show of solidarity and political will, member nations of United Nations Human Rights Council passed a resolution concluding the UN Declaration for the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas. The resolution was passed with 33 votes in favour, 11 abstentions and 3 against. [1]

    Contre : Australie, Hongrie et Royaume-Uni

    In favour: Afghanistan, Angola, Burundi, Chile, China, Cote d’Ivoire, Cuba, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iraq, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, South Africa, Switzerland, Togo, Tunisia, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, Venezuela

    Abstention: Belgium, Brazil, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Iceland, Japan, Republic of Korea, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain

    https://viacampesina.org/en/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2011/03/Declaration-of-rights-of-peasants-2009.pdf

    #droit_des_paysan·nes

  • Les #réfugiés_érythréens ne sont pas les bienvenus en Suisse, mais l’or d’Erythrée, lui...

    Schweizer Geschäfte mit einem geächteten Regime

    Die Schweiz hat von 2011 bis 2013 für rund 400 Millionen Franken Rohgold aus Eritrea importiert. Schweizer Firmen haben es raffiniert und daraus Goldbarren gegossen.
    Die #Bisha-Goldmine gehört zu 40 Prozent dem repressiven eritreischen Regime.
    Ein ehemaliger Arbeiter der Mine lebt heute als Flüchtling in der Schweiz. Er erzählt von Zwangsarbeit beim Bau der Mine.
    Aus keinem anderen Land kommen so viele Asylsuchende in die Schweiz wie aus Eritrea. Die Mine ist eine der wichtigsten Einnahmequellen des Regimes.
    Asylpolitiker von links bis rechts kritisieren die Millionengeschäfte scharf.

    https://www.srf.ch/news/schweiz/schweizer-geschaefte-mit-einem-geaechteten-regime?ns_source=srf_app?ns_source=sr
    #or #matières_premières #Erythrée #Suisse #mines #travail_forcé #film #vidéo #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Lufthansa #Frankfurt #Nevsun

    Accusation (provenant de la société civile canadienne selon SFR) de travail forcé dans la mine :

    L’exploitant de la mine, Nevsun :
    http://www.nevsun.com
    Ici la description de la mine sur le site de l’entreprise :
    Bisha Mine Location


    http://www.nevsun.com/projects/bisha-main

    On dit bien que :

    The State of Eritrea has a 40% interest in the Bisha Mine through the #Eritrean_National_Mining_Company (#ENAMCO), 30% of which it bought from Nevsun prior to initial construction. As a result, ENAMCO contributed 33% of the initial build capital and, as a partner with Nevsun, has been integral to the success of the Bisha Mine. For more see About Eritrea.

    Et toujours sur le site un chapitre consacré à « about Eritrea », où on parle notamment de l’infrastructure (définie comme « excellente ») qui permet de sortir les matières premières des mines :


    http://www.nevsun.com/projects/bisha-main/eritrea

    L’histoire de l’Erythrée, pour Nevsun, s’arrête en 1993 :

    Eritrea gained independence in 1993, after fighting for its freedom for over 30 years.

    Et bien évidemment, on parle d’économie (un des pays les plus pauvres du monde), mais pas de politique...

    Eritrea is largely an agriculture based economy and one of the poorest nations in the world. The country’s economy predominantly consists of:

    cc @reka

    • Mining Company on Trial for Human Rights Abuses Appears to Lobby at the Human Rights Council (HRC)

      Nevsun Mining Resources Ltd, based in Canada is cur rently facing a lawsuit initiated by more than 80 Eritrean plaintiffs, who contend they were victims of forced labour, human rights abuses and crimes against humanity at the company’s Bisha Mine in Eritrea. #Bisha Mine is owned 60-per-cent by Nevsun and 40-per-cent by Eritrean government.

      Forced Labour and the appalling conditions in Bisha Mine have been documented by Human Rights Watch and the UN Commission of Inquiry into Human Rights in Eritrea. Yet the Todd Romain, the Vice President of Corporate Social Responsibility of this company and his PR are at present in Geneva at the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) session where the current special rapporteur on human rights in Eritrea is due to deliver her final report, and a decision will be made regarding the renewal of the mandate.

      Nevsun also participated in side events organized by the Eritrean Mission at the HRC on 16 June 2016 (http://www.eritrea-chat.com/eritrean-mining-conference-about-human-rights-in-geneva-16-june-2016) and on 8 March 2018 , and visited many Missions in Geneva despite the fact that this court case was already ongoing.

      Human Rights Concern-Eritrea (HRCE) believes most strongly that it is inappropriate for a representative of a commercial corporation whose name has been raised in connection with human rights abuses during HRC debates and oral statements on the human rights in Eritrea, and which is currently the accused to court proceedings regarding human rights abuses, should be party to human rights side events, neither should it’s top representative give the appearance of lobbying country delegations about HRC initiatives that are directly concerned with its court case.

      Eritrea has not implemented any of the UPR recommendations from the first and second cycles. The recommendations from the Commission of Inquiries and the Special Rapporteur have so far been ignored. No improvements in human rights in Eritrea have been identified in the last decade; 10,000 or more prisoners of conscience are still in detention and the violently enforced lifelong military service which prevails unreformed. Forced/slave labour have been used in all the government owned businesses including mining projects.

      HRCE feels it important that country delegations and media are made fully aware of this issue, and advises that no further hearing should be given to any of Nevsun’s representatives pending a final court ruling on the human rights case.

      http://hrc-eritrea.org/mining-company-on-trial-for-human-rights-abuses-appears-to-lobby-at-the

    • Nevsun lawsuit (re Bisha mine, Eritrea)

      In November 2014, three Eritreans filed a lawsuit against Nevsun Resources in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. They allege the company was complicit in the use of forced labour by Nevsun’s local sub-contractor, Segen Construction (owned by Eritrea’s ruling party), at the Bisha mine in Eritrea. Nevsun, headquartered in Vancouver, has denied the allegations. This lawsuit is the first in Canada where claims are based directly on violations of international law.

      The plaintiffs, Gize Yebeyo Araya, Kesete Tekle Fshazion and Mihretab Yemane Tekle, claim that they worked at the Bisha mine against their will and were subject to “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment”. They allege that they were forced to work long hours and lived in constant fear of threats of torture and intimidation. Nevsun has rejected the allegations as “unfounded” and declared that “the Bisha Mine has adhered at all times to international standards of governance, workplace conditions, and health and safety”.

      In October 2016, the Supreme Court of British Colombia rejected Nevsun’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit and ruled that the case should proceed in British Colombia as there were doubts that the plaintiffs would get a fair trial in Eritrea. Nevsun appealed the decision.

      In November 2017, the British Columbia Court of Appeal rejected Nevsun’s appeal to dismiss the suit, thereby allowing the case to proceed in Canadian courts. The court also allowed claims of crimes against humanity, slavery, forced labour, and torture to go forward against Nevsun. This decision marked the first time an appellate court in Canada permitted a mass tort claim for modern slavery.

      On 19 January 2018, Nevsun filed an application with the Canadian Supreme Court asking for permission to appeal the British Columbia ruling. There is no fixed time for the Supreme Court to decide whether to grant or deny such applications.

      – “Nevsun appeals to Canada Supreme Court in Eritreans’ forced labor lawsuit”, Reuters, 26 Jan 2018
      – “Court allows Eritrean mine workers to sue Nevsun”, Nelson Bennett, Business in Vancouver, 6 Oct 2016
      – [Video] “Nevsun in Eritrea: Dealing With a Dictator”, CBC Radio-Canada, 12 Feb 2016
      – [FR] «Une minière canadienne nie des allégations de travail forcé en Érythrée », Radio-Canada, 23 novembre 2014
      – “Nevsun Denies Accusations of Human-Rights Abuses at Eritrea Mine”, Michael Gunn & Firat Kayakiran, Bloomberg, 21 Nov 2014
      – “Nevsun Resources faces lawsuit over ‘forced labour’ in Eritrea”, Jeff Gray, Globe and Mail (Canada), 20 Nov 2014

      Canadian Centre for International Justice (CCIJ):

      – “Vancouver court clears way for slave labour lawsuit against Canadian mining company to go to trial”, 6 Oct 2016
      – “Eritreans file lawsuit against Canadian mining company for slave labour and crimes against humanity”, 20 Nov 2014
      – [FR] « Des Érythréens intentent un recours contre une compagnie minière canadienne pour l’usage de main d’œuvre servile ainsi que pour des crimes contre l’humanité », 20 novembre 2014
      – “Appeal court confirms slave labour lawsuit against Canadian mining company can go to trial”, 21 Nov 2017

      Nevsun:
      – “Nevsun Comments on B.C. Lawsuit”, 6 Oct 2016
      – “Nevsun Comments on B.C. Lawsuit”, 21 Nov 2014

      Camp Fiorante Matthews Mogerman [Counsel for the plaintiffs]
      – “Plaintiffs’ Submissions on Forum Non Conveniens”, 17 Dec 2015
      – “Plaintiffs’ Submissions on the Representative Proceeding”, 17 Dec 2015
      – “Plaintiffs’ Submissions on Customary International Law”, 15 Dec 2015
      – “Plaintiffs’ Submissions on the Act of State Doctrine”, 14 Dec 2015
      – “Notice of Civil Claim”, 20 Nov 2014

      Siskinds [Co-counsel for the plaintiffs]
      – “Siskinds co-counsel in lawsuit against Nevsun Resources”, 20 Nov 2014

      Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP [Counsel for the defendant]
      – “Nevsun’s Chambers Brief on Customary International Law”, 1 Dec 2015
      – “Nevsun’s Chambers Brief on Forum Non Conveniens”, 23 Nov 2015
      – “Nevsun’s Chambers Brief on the Act of State Doctrine”, 23 Nov 2015
      – “Nevsun’s Chambers Brief on the Representative Proceeding”, 23 Nov 2015
      – “Nevsun’s Response to Civil Claim”, 13 Feb 2015

      – Araya v. Nevsun Resources. Reasons for Judgment, Justice Abrioux, Supreme Court of British Columbia, 6 Oct 2016
      – Araya, Gize v. Nevsun Resources Ltd.[payment required], Vancouver law courts, 20 Nov 2014.

      – Gize Yebeyo Araya, Kesete Tekle Fshazion and Mihretab Yemane Tekle v Nevsun Resources Ltd and Earth Rights International, Court of Appeal for British Columbia, 21 Nov 2017


      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/nevsun-lawsuit-re-bisha-mine-eritrea

      Quelques liens cités dans cet article :
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/canadian-courts-review-series-of-claims-filed-against-canadian
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/nevsun-denies-accusations-of-human-rights-abuses-at-eritrea-mi
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/eritrean-refugees-file-claim-in-canada-against-nevsun-over-all
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/nevsun-lawsuit-re-bisha-mine-eritrea#c168706
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/vancouver-court-clears-way-for-slave-labour-lawsuit-against-ca
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/eritrean-refugees-file-claim-in-canada-against-nevsun-over-all
      https://www.business-humanrights.org/fr/des-erythr%C3%A9ens-intentent-un-proc%C3%A8s-contre-nevsun-au-

    • Nevsun in Eritrea: Dealing With a Dictator

      When a small Vancouver mining company struck gold in a remote corner of Africa, it started with so much promise. In remote Eritrea, Nevsun built a mine that was generating $700 million in profits in its first four years of operation. But it was also generating a lot of controversy – because Nevsun was partnered with a brutal dictatorship that runs the country and controls 40% of the mine. That has led to allegations by the UN and Human Rights Watch that the regime has used conscripted military labour in the mine. The Eritrea government has also been accused of funnelling arms to the terrorist group al-Shabaab. Nevsun denies the allegations of human rights abuses and insists it is a “template for responsible international business.” What is the price of doing business with a dictator? Mark Kelley investigates.

      The Eritrea regime has a 40 per cent stake in the mine and is accused of crimes against humanity by the U.N.
      Nevsun Resources Ltd. is facing a lawsuit in B.C.’s Supreme Court
      The allegations filed by three former Eritrean conscripts in B.C.’s Supreme Court accuse Nevsun Resources of being “an accomplice to the use of forced labour, crimes against humanity and other human rights abuses at the Bisha mine”

      http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/episodes/2014-2015/nevsun-in-eritrea-dealing-with-a-dictator

    • Appeal court confirms slave labour lawsuit against Canadian mining company can go to trial

      British Columbia’s highest court today rejected an appeal by Vancouver-based Nevsun Resources Limited (TSX: NSU / NYSE MKT: NSU) that sought to dismiss a lawsuit brought by Eritreans who allege they were forced to work at Nevsun’s Bisha Mine.

      The ruling by the British Columbia Court of Appeal marks the first time that an appellate court in Canada has permitted a mass tort claim for modern slavery.

      The court rejected Nevsun’s position that the case should be dismissed in Canada and instead heard in Eritrea. Madam Justice Mary Newbury described the situation in Eritrea as one with “the prospects of no trial at all, or a trial in an Eritrean court, possibly presided over by a functionary with no real independence from the state … and in a legal system that would appear to be actuated largely by the wishes of the President and his military supporters…”

      The court also allowed claims of crimes against humanity, slavery, forced labour, and torture to go forward against Nevsun. It is the first time that a Canadian appellate court has recognized that a corporation can be taken to trial for alleged violations of international law norms related to human rights.

      The lawsuit, filed in November 2014, alleges that Nevsun engaged Eritrean state-run contractors and the Eritrean military to build the mine’s facilities and that the companies and military deployed forced labour under abhorrent conditions.

      “We are very pleased that the case will move to trial,” said Joe Fiorante, Q.C., of Camp Fiorante Matthews Mogerman LLP, lead counsel for the plaintiffs. “There will now be a reckoning in a Canadian court of law in which Nevsun will have to answer to the allegations that it was complicit in forced labour and grave human rights abuses at the Bisha mine.”

      Since the initial filing by three Eritrean men, which was the matter reviewed by the Court of Appeal, an additional 51 people have come forward to assert claims against Nevsun.

      “I am overjoyed that a Canadian court will hear our claims,” said plaintiff Gize Araya. “Since starting the case, we have always hoped Canada would provide justice for what we suffered at the mine.”

      The court also rejected Nevsun’s argument that the company should be immune from suit because the case might touch on actions of the Eritrean government, including allegations of severe human rights violations. Justice Newbury, looking to a recent UK case on the issue, wrote that “torture (and I would add, forced labour and slavery) is ‘contrary to both peremptory norms of international law and a fundamental value of domestic law.’”

      This latest ruling by the B.C. Court of Appeal follows one earlier this year permitting a case to go forward against Tahoe Resources for injuries suffered by protestors in Guatemala who were shot outside the company’s mine.

      “The Nevsun and Tahoe cases show that Canadian courts can properly exercise jurisdiction over Canadian companies with overseas operations,” said Amanda Ghahremani, Legal Director of the Canadian Centre for International Justice. “When there is a real risk of injustice for claimants in a foreign legal system, their cases should proceed here.”

      The plaintiffs are supported in Canada by a legal team comprised of Vancouver law firm Camp Fiorante Matthews Mogerman LLP (CFM); Ontario law firm Siskinds LLP [Nick Baker]; Toronto lawyer James Yap; and the Canadian Centre for International Justice (CCIJ). This victory would not have been possible without the support of Human Rights Concern Eritrea and the tireless efforts of Elsa Chyrum.

      https://www.ccij.ca/news/press-release-nevsun-case

    • Nevsun Comments on B.C. Lawsuit

      Nevsun Resources Ltd...advises that the British Columbia Supreme Court has refused to permit a claim against Nevsun to proceed as a common law class action. The court did permit the lawsuit by the three named plaintiffs to continue. Today’s court decision addresses only preliminary legal challenges to the action raised by Nevsun. The judgment makes no findings with respect to the plaintiffs’ allegations, including whether any of them were in fact at the Bisha Mine. The judge also emphasized that the case raises novel and complex legal questions, including on international law, which have never before been considered in Canada. Nevsun is studying the court’s decision and considering an appeal of the decision that the action can proceed at all. Nevsun remains confident that its indirect 60%-owned Eritrean subsidiary, Bisha Mining Share Company (“BMSC”) operates the Bisha Mine according to international standards of governance, workplace conditions, health, safety and human rights...BMSC is committed to managing the Bisha Mine in a safe and responsible manner that respects the interests of local communities, workers, stakeholders and the natural environment.

      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/nevsun-comments-on-bc-lawsuit-0

    • “In November 2014, three Eritreans filed a lawsuit against Nevsun Resources in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. They allege the company was complicit in the use of forced labour by Nevsun’s local sub-contractor, Segen Construction (owned by Eritrea’s ruling party)...”
      "... at the Bisha mine in Eritrea. Nevsun, headquartered in Vancouver, has denied the allegations. The plaintiffs ... claim that they worked against their will and were subject to “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment”.

      https://twitter.com/eduyesolomon/status/1232726864193556480

  • Burmese government rejects international inquiry into anti-Rohingya pogrom - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/05/15/burm-m15.html

    Burmese government rejects international inquiry into anti-Rohingya pogrom
    By John Roberts
    15 May 2017

    A European tour by the Burmese (Myanmar) head of government Aung San Suu Kyi this month has been marked by shameless hypocrisy, outright lies and cover-up of the campaign by the military and nationalist thugs to terrorise the country’s Rohingya Muslim minority.

    On May 2 in Brussels, the European Union headquarters, Suu Kyi, flatly rejected a fact-finding investigation mission proposed on March 24 at the annual meeting of the 47-member UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva.

    #birmanie #rohingas

  • Did Saudi buy its seat on the UN Human Rights Council? | The Saudi Cables
    https://saudicableleaks.wordpress.com/2015/06/21/did-saudi-buy-its-seat-on-the-un-human-rights-council

    An official cable from the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the Saudi mission to the UN ordered the transfer of $100,000 to be used for a “campaign” to win Saudi a seat on the Human Rights Council.

    In addition, a separate correspondence from the Saudi to Russian mission promises to support Russia’s candidacy to the Council if they reciprocate in kind.

    Saudi, which recently carried out its 100th beheading this year, did end up securing the seat. A questionable victory, given its abysmal human rights record at home as well as the Kingdom’s current controversial military campaign in Yemen. The Kingdom, which began an aerial-bombing campaign in Yemen more than three months ago, has enforced a strict blockade of Yemen’s ports, keeping out fuel needed for the local population’s survival in violation of the laws of war, according to Human Rights Watch.

    #saudileaks #ONU #corruption #arabie_saoudite #droits_humains

  • United Nations News Centre - Europe should make ‘mobility’ central in migration policy, UN rights expert says
    http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=51163
    /News/dh/photos/large/2014/November/11-18-2014Migrants_Europe.jpg

    “The European Union (EU) must recognize that irregular migration is a result of policies prohibiting immigration,” the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, François Crépeau, addressing the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. “Such policies only serve to open a new and lucrative market for smuggling rings, which could not exist without this prohibition.”

    “If Europe insists on focusing most of its resources on securitization, it will fail to defeat smuggling rings,” Mr. Crépeau warned.

    The Rapporteur called therefore on the EU to establish a human rights-based, coherent and comprehensive migration policy which makes mobility its central asset. “It is the only way in which it can reclaim its border, effectively combat smuggling and empower migrants,” the Special Rapporteur assured.

  • #Moyen-Orient - Le représentant du #Vatican à l’ONU soutient l’usage de la #force contre l’EI - France 24
    http://www.france24.com/fr/20150315-vatican-onu-geneve-force-ei-etat-islamique-genocide-irak-syrie-pa

    L’observateur permanent du Vatican aux Nations unies à Genève a apporté un soutien inhabituel au recours à la force en Irak et Syrie contre l’organisation de l’État islamique (EI). Dans une interview au site catholique américain Crux, l’archevêque Silvano Tomasi accuse l’EI de commettre des atrocités à grande échelle qui justifient une intervention internationale.

    Vatican backs military force to stop ISIS ‘genocide’ | Crux
    http://www.cruxnow.com/church/2015/03/13/vatican-backs-military-force-to-stop-isis-genocide

    Tomasi issued the call in an interview with Crux on the same day he presented a statement entitled “Supporting the Human Rights of Christians and Other Communities, particularly in the Middle East,” coauthored with the Russian Federation and Lebanon, to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

  • Migranti, Italia e Ue dialogano con l’Africa delle dittature

    A Roma si è tenuta la Conferenza ministeriale di lancio del Processo di Khartoum: la diplomazia europea apre agli aiuti nel Corno d’Africa e si attavola con le dittature

    http://www.polisblog.it/post/278184/migranti-italia-e-ue-dialogano-con-lafrica-delle-dittature
    #processus_de_khartoum #migration #asile #externalisation #dictature #screening #diplomatie #aide_au_développement #accords

    • Concerns over Eritrea’s role in efforts by Africa and EU to manage refugees

      Early in 2019 the Eritrean government will take over the chair of the key Africa and European Union (EU) forum dealing with African migration, known as the Khartoum Process.

      The Khartoum Process was established in the Sudanese capital in 2014. It’s had little public profile, yet it’s the most important means Europe has of attempting to halt the flow of refugees and migrants from Africa. The official title says it all: The EU-Horn of Africa Migration Route Initiative. Its main role is spelled out as being:

      primarily focused on preventing and fighting migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings.

      Chairing the Khartoum Process alternates between European and African leaders. In January it will be Africa’s turn. The steering committee has five African members – Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Sudan. A number of others nations, such as Kenya to Tunisia, have participating status.

      The African countries chose Eritrea to lead this critical relationship. But it’s been heavily criticised because it places refugees and asylum seekers in the hands of a regime that is notorious for its human rights abuses. Worse still, there is evidence that Eritrean officials are directly implicated in human trafficking the Khartoum Process is meant to end.

      That the European Union allowed this to happen puts in question its repeated assurances that human rights are at the heart of its foreign policies.

      The Khartoum Process

      The Khartoum Process involves a huge range of initiatives. All are designed to reduce the number of Africans crossing the Mediterranean. These include training the fragile Libyan government’s coastguards, who round up migrants at sea and return them to the brutal conditions of the Libyan prison camps.

      The programme has sometimes backfired. Some EU-funded coastguards have been accused of involvement in people trafficking themselves.

      The EU has also established a regional operational centre in Khartoum. But this has meant European officials collaborating with the security forces of a government which has regularly abused its own citizens, as well as foreigners on its soil. President Omar al-Bashir himself has been indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

      The centre requires European police and other officers to work directly with the security officials who uphold the Sudanese government. According to the head of the immigration police department,

      The planned countertrafficking coordination centre in Khartoum – staffed jointly by police officers from Sudan and several European countries, including Britain, France and Italy – will partly rely on information sourced by Sudanese National Intelligence.

      The centre also receives support from Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces, which grew out of the Janjaweed: notorious for the atrocities it committed in Darfur.

      These initiatives are all very much in line with the migration agreement signed in the Maltese capital in 2015. Its action plan detailed how European institutions would co-operate with their African partners to fight

      irregular migration, migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings.

      Europe promised to offer training to law enforcement and judicial authorities in new methods of investigation and to assist in setting up specialised anti-trafficking and smuggling police units.

      It is this sensitive relationship that will now come under Eritrean supervision. They will be dealing with some of the most vulnerable men, women and children who have fled their own countries. It is here that the process gets really difficult, because Eritrean government officials have themselves been implicated in human trafficking. UN researchers, working for the Security Council described how this took place in 2011.

      More recently, survivors of human trafficking interviewed by a team led by Dutch professor Mirjam van Reisen, described how the Eritrean Border Surveillance Unit ferried refugees out of Eritrea, at a price.

      The danger is that implicated Eritrean officials will play a critical role in the development of the Khartoum Process.

      Europe’s commitment to human rights

      The EU has repeatedly stressed that its commitment to human rights runs through everything it does. Yet the Eritrean government, with which the EU is now collaborating so closely, has been denounced for its human rights abuses by no less than the Special Rapporteur for Eritrea to the UN Human Rights Council as recently as June 2018.

      As Mike Smith, who chaired the UN Commission Inquiry into Eritrea in 2015, put it:

      The many violations in Eritrea are of a scope and scale seldom seen anywhere else in today’s world. Basic freedoms are curtailed, from movement to expression; from religion to association. The Commission finds that crimes against humanity may have occurred with regard to torture, extrajudicial executions, forced labour and in the context of national service.

      The EU itself has remained silent. It is difficult to see how the EU can allow its key African migration work to be overseen by such a regime, without running foul of its own human rights commitments. European leaders need to reconsider their relationships with African governments implicated in gross human rights abuses if they are to uphold these values.

      The Khartoum Process may have reduced the flow of refugees and asylum seekers across the Mediterranean. But it hasn’t eliminated the need for a fresh approach to their plight.

      https://reliefweb.int/report/world/concerns-over-eritrea-s-role-efforts-africa-and-eu-manage-refugees
      #droits_humains

    • Concerns over Eritrea’s role in efforts by Africa and EU to manage refugees

      Early in 2019 the Eritrean government will take over the chair of the key Africa and European Union (EU) forum dealing with African migration, known as the Khartoum Process.

      The Khartoum Process was established in the Sudanese capital in 2014. It’s had little public profile, yet it’s the most important means Europe has of attempting to halt the flow of refugees and migrants from Africa. The official title says it all: The EU-Horn of Africa Migration Route Initiative. Its main role is spelled out as being:

      primarily focused on preventing and fighting migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings.

      Chairing the Khartoum Process alternates between European and African leaders. In January it will be Africa’s turn. The steering committee has five African members – Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Sudan. A number of others nations, such as Kenya to Tunisia, have participating status.

      The African countries chose Eritrea to lead this critical relationship. But it’s been heavily criticised because it places refugees and asylum seekers in the hands of a regime that is notorious for its human rights abuses. Worse still, there is evidence that Eritrean officials are directly implicated in human trafficking the Khartoum Process is meant to end.

      That the European Union allowed this to happen puts in question its repeated assurances that human rights are at the heart of its foreign policies.
      The Khartoum Process

      The Khartoum Process involves a huge range of initiatives. All are designed to reduce the number of Africans crossing the Mediterranean. These include training the fragile Libyan government’s coastguards, who round up migrants at sea and return them to the brutal conditions of the Libyan prison camps.

      The programme has sometimes backfired. Some EU-funded coastguards have been accused of involvement in people trafficking themselves.

      The EU has also established a regional operational centre in Khartoum. But this has meant European officials collaborating with the security forces of a government which has regularly abused its own citizens, as well as foreigners on its soil. President Omar al-Bashir himself has been indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

      The centre requires European police and other officers to work directly with the security officials who uphold the Sudanese government. According to the head of the immigration police department,

      The planned countertrafficking coordination centre in Khartoum – staffed jointly by police officers from Sudan and several European countries, including Britain, France and Italy – will partly rely on information sourced by Sudanese National Intelligence.

      The centre also receives support from Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces, which grew out of the Janjaweed: notorious for the atrocities it committed in Darfur.

      These initiatives are all very much in line with the migration agreement signed in the Maltese capital in 2015. Its action plan detailed how European institutions would co-operate with their African partners to fight

      irregular migration, migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings.

      Europe promised to offer training to law enforcement and judicial authorities in new methods of investigation and to assist in setting up specialised anti-trafficking and smuggling police units.

      It is this sensitive relationship that will now come under Eritrean supervision. They will be dealing with some of the most vulnerable men, women and children who have fled their own countries. It is here that the process gets really difficult, because Eritrean government officials have themselves been implicated in human trafficking. UN researchers, working for the Security Council described how this took place in 2011.

      More recently, survivors of human trafficking interviewed by a team led by Dutch professor Mirjam van Reisen, described how the Eritrean Border Surveillance Unit ferried refugees out of Eritrea, at a price.

      The danger is that implicated Eritrean officials will play a critical role in the development of the Khartoum Process.
      Europe’s commitment to human rights

      The EU has repeatedly stressed that its commitment to human rights runs through everything it does. Yet the Eritrean government, with which the EU is now collaborating so closely, has been denounced for its human rights abuses by no less than the Special Rapporteur for Eritrea to the UN Human Rights Council as recently as June 2018.

      As Mike Smith, who chaired the UN Commission Inquiry into Eritrea in 2015, put it:

      The many violations in Eritrea are of a scope and scale seldom seen anywhere else in today’s world. Basic freedoms are curtailed, from movement to expression; from religion to association. The Commission finds that crimes against humanity may have occurred with regard to torture, extrajudicial executions, forced labour and in the context of national service.

      The EU itself has remained silent. It is difficult to see how the EU can allow its key African migration work to be overseen by such a regime, without running foul of its own human rights commitments. European leaders need to reconsider their relationships with African governments implicated in gross human rights abuses if they are to uphold these values.

      The Khartoum Process may have reduced the flow of refugees and asylum seekers across the Mediterranean. But it hasn’t eliminated the need for a fresh approach to their plight.

      https://theconversation.com/concerns-over-eritreas-role-in-efforts-by-africa-and-eu-to-manage-r

  • #UN rights chief: “strong possibility” #Israel violating international law in #Gaza
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/un-rights-chief-strong-possibility-israel-violating-international

    Israel may be committing war crimes in Gaza, where its punitive house demolitions and killing of children raise the “strong possibility” that it is violating international law, UN High Commissioner for #Human_Rights Navi Pillay said on Wednesday. Pillay, opening an emergency debate at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, also condemned the firing of rockets and mortars by Hamas into Occupied #Palestine. (Reuters)

  • Kuwait claims progress on ending ‘sponsorship’
    http://www.arabtimesonline.com/NewsDetails/tabid/96/smid/414/ArticleID/206154/reftab/36/Default.aspx

    KUWAIT CITY, May 18, (KUNA): Kuwait has achieved much progress towards the rescission of the Kafeel or sponsorship system applied in the country, a senior official of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said here on Sunday.

    Speaking to reporters while opening a training course on the fight against human trafficking, held at the ministry, the chief of the ministry’s follow-up and coordination department, said Kuwait was compiling a report on the human rights situation in the country as a prelude to submitting it to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in February.

    Kuwait is keen to fix any loophole or problem in national human rights law in order to find the optimum way to tackle the human rights issue in the country, he added.

    Asked about US claims concerning failure to bring those involved in human trafficking cases to accountability, the Foreign Ministry’s official said: “Such claims are totally divorced from reality.” On the training course, he said it is the second course to be co-organized by the ministry and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) as part of a national plan to promote the role and efforts of the State of Kuwait in the human rights field.

  • Egypt/Sudan : A Call to End Torture of Refugees | Human Rights Watch

    http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/03/17/egyptsudan-call-end-torture-refugees

    Members of the UN Human Rights Council called on Egypt and Sudan on March 14, 2014, to investigate and prosecute traffickers for kidnapping, torturing, and killing refugees in the Sinai Peninsula. The 24 countries sponsoring the German-led statement also called on both countries to identify and prosecute any security officials who may have colluded with traffickers.

    On February 11 Human Rights Watch released a report titled “‘I Just Wanted to Lie Down and Die:’ Trafficking and Torture of Eritreans in Sudan and Egypt,” which documents how, since 2010, Egyptian traffickers have tortured Eritreans for ransom in the Sinai Peninsula usingrape, burning, and mutilation. It also documents torture by traffickers in eastern Sudan and 29 incidents in which victims said that Sudanese and Egyptian security officers facilitated trafficker abuses rather than arresting the traffickers and rescuing their victims.

  • ▶ Deeyah Khan and Hina Jilani at UN Human Rights Council - YouTube
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnAL5dvvS34#t=139

    Publiée le 13 mars 2014

    Film director Deeyah Khan speaks to Hina Jilani at UN Human Rights Council March 2014 about the role of art and artists in civil society.

    By Deeyah Khan

    http://artsfreedom.org/?p=7002

    Art is a powerful form of communication which has a unique ability to transcend cultural and linguistic boundaries, an exploration of what it means to be human. Art can be brash or sublime, basic or intricate, and is one of the first forms of human expression and which remains rooted in the creative potential for innovation and transformation. It has an extraordinary capacity to express resistance and rebellion; protest and hope. It can start conversations; it can bring subjects into the public sphere, expose abuses and to point towards new worlds: to touch people in a deeper and more affecting way than academic and political discourse, to move us to tears, to laughter and to action. There is a reason why artists, intellectuals and women are usually the first targets of oppressive regimes, of fundamentalist groups and of reactionaries of all stripes, who cannot bear any positions that threaten their perceived monopoly on truth or which expose their corruption and cruelty.

    So, where art is transgressive, it is decried as immoral, seditious or contrary to religious rules. Artists are silenced by many means, from harassment to imprisonment, from censorship to accusations of blasphemy; which can itself be a death sentence. This precious human resource is formed from deep continuities with our artistic traditions with the fertile exploration of new forms to make up the glorious potential of creativity: surely one of the pinnacles of human achievement and experience. The English radical poet Shelley considered poets to be the unacknowledged legislators of the world: the future is in the present as the plant lies in the seed, he said; and art has the potential to realise this future, a future of equality, diversity and unity. In this sense, artists should be considered providing a vital, but under-appreciated contribution to the functioning of civil society.

    #musique #femmes #censure #onu

  • A joint declaration by 27 UN member states expressing concern about Egypt’s repeated use of excessive force against demonstrators turned the international spotlight on Egypt’s human rights abuses | Human Rights Watch

    http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/03/07/un-human-rights-council-egypt-rights-abuses-spotlight

    It was the firstsuch action at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva since Egyptian security forces killed hundreds of protesters in dispersing a sit-in at Raba’a Square in Cairo on August 14, 2013.

  • Saudi activist faces new execution threat. Raif Badawi accused of apostasy, says wife
    http://www.al-bab.com/blog/2013/december/saudi-activist-faces-new-execution-threat.htm#sthash.ytl7hFOE.KwpJNBZW.dpbs

    Last month Saudi Arabia was one of several repressive countries
    elected to the UN Human Rights Council for a three-year term. In the view of rights lawyer Abdulaziz Alhussan, 2013 has been “one of the worst years” for activists in Saudi Arabia, though it was ultimately “much worse for the government” because Saudis are now more informed and aware of the needs for better governance.

    The authorities are fighting what appears to be a losing battle to retain control of public discourse as citizens express their discontent through social media

    #tic_arabes

  • #Gaza fuel crisis: UN expert calls for urgent action to avert a humanitarian catastrophe
    http://www.ohchr.org/FR/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=14028&LangID=E

    United Nations Special Rapporteur Richard Falk today called for urgent action to address the power shortage in occupied Palestine that has left 1.7 million residents of the Gaza Strip in a dire situation. More than three weeks after the only power plant shut down due to a critical fuel shortage, power supply has been limited to six hours a day.

    “The situation in Gaza is at a point of near catastrophe,” warned the independent expert charged by the UN Human Rights Council to monitor and report on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967.

    “The fuel shortage and power cuts have undermined an already precarious infrastructure, severely disrupting the provision of basic services, including health, water and sanitation,” he said. “The onset of winter is certain to make things even worse.”

    Less than half of Gaza’s total power needs are being met and disruptions to specialized health services, such as kidney dialysis, operating theatres, blood banks, intensive care units and incubators are putting the lives of vulnerable patients in Gaza at risk.

    Mr. Falk highlighted the plight of patients in Gaza unable to seek affordable specialized medical treatment in Egypt as a result of Egypt’s closure of the Rafah crossing in recent weeks. “The Israeli authorities have been more forthcoming in issuing permits to Gazans in need of urgent specialized treatment, but the high cost of medical treatment in Israel places it beyond the reach of most Gazans,” he noted.

    For the past two weeks, approximately 3000 residents, including children, living in or near the Gazan neighbourhood of Az Zeitoun have been wading through raw sewage on the streets after the largest sewage treatment facility in area overflowed due to a power failure.

    The Special Rapporteur stressed that other sewage treatment stations may soon also run out of petrol to fuel generators and result in more sewage overflowing onto the streets of Gaza. Medical experts have warned of the serious risk of disease, and even an epidemic.

  • Israel must be included in Western nations’ group on UN human rights council, allies say
    Haaretz, By Barak Ravid | Nov. 18, 2013

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.558730

    Six of Israel’s allies in the West have demanded an upgrade of its status on the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

    A Western diplomat said the demand by these six countries, members of the Western European and Others Group in the UN, was made in the wake of Israel’s agreement to resume ties with the UNHRC and appear two weeks ago at the council’s Universal Periodic Review on human rights issues.

    On November 6, the ambassadors of the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Germany, France and the United States sent a letter to the UN’s institutions in Geneva and to the ambassador of Spain, who heads the group of Western countries on the HRC. In the letter, a copy of which was sent to Haaretz, the six ambassadors wrote that the time had come to bring Israel into the WEOG.

    “We, the undersigned, would like by this letter to recall Israel’s longstanding request to join the WEOG regional group in Geneva. We are strongly supportive of Israel’s membership at the earliest opportunity. We request that you kindly include this issue on the agenda of the next WEOG meeting in Geneva, to be held as soon as possible,” the letter read in part.

    If the bid to bring Israel into the WEOG succeeds, it will be more difficult to isolate and condemn Israel. It will also be easier for Israel to propose diplomatic initiatives of its own in the HRC.

    A Western diplomat told Haaretz that the effort is likely to succeed because most of the WEOG’s countries do not oppose Israel’s inclusion. Only two countries, Iceland and Liechtenstein, had reservations about it, while two others, Ireland and Turkey, expressed neither opposition nor support. “We will persuade the undecided countries too,” the Western diplomat said.

    On October 29, Israel attended the Universal Periodic Review in the UNHRC in Geneva. This was after Israel boycotted the UNHRC for more than a year and a half because of its decision to establish an international investigative committee about the settlements.

    In recent months, negotiations took place between Israel and the WEOG for Israel’s return to the HRC. Allies such as the U.S., Australia, Germany and the U.K. put heavy pressure on Israel to attend the hearing. In exchange, the Western countries promised to restrict the use of Agenda Item 7, which stipulates that a separate discussion on human rights in Israel and in the West Bank take place at every session of the HRC. Israel is the only country in the world regarding which such a rule exists.

    The Western European countries promised to make no statements or speeches during sessions that would come under Agenda Item 7, and to render any such statements empty of content. This promise will apply to the HRC’s next two sessions, which will take place over the next two years. A unanimous decision of all the group’s members will be required to lift the restrictions on Agenda Item 7 — and unanimous decisions are difficult to obtain.

    The Western countries also promised to bring Israel’s inclusion in the WEOG as a full member up for a vote in November. Israel is not a member of any regional group, which results in its isolation and makes it very difficult for Israel to garner support for diplomatic positions or actions.

  • Europeans discuss terms for Israel’s return to UN human rights council

    Comment la France et les Etats-Unis agissent en faveur d’Israël

    By Barak Ravid | Oct. 24, 2013
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.554088

    Israel may be on the verge of renewing cooperation with the United Nations Council on Human Rights, a year and a half after Jerusalem severed ties with the international body.

    Negotiations between Israel and the council will reach a pivotal stage in Geneva within the next two days, as ambassadors of Western states on the council vote on an agreement which would bring Israel back into the UN body. If the outline of the accord is passed, it would represent a significant diplomatic victory for Israel, which has boycotted the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva since March 2012.

    Then-Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman cut off ties with the commission, following the latter’s decision to convene an international committee to investigate the settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

    Israel’s negotiations with the council have received strong assistance from the United States, Switzerland, and France, which acted against other Western states. The Israeli side of the negotiations has been led by Ambassador Aharon Leshno-Yaar, head of the Foreign Ministry’s international organizations department, who reported to Deputy Foreign Minister Ze’ev Elkin.

    The outlined plan for resuming cooperation contains two clauses which, if passed, would be considered a significant diplomatic victory for Israel:

    The first is that Israel would join the permanent group of Western states serving as part of the human rights council, which includes Western European states, Turkey, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. As of today, Israel is not a part of any regional group, a fact that makes it difficult for Israel to garner support for various diplomatic endeavors.

    The second clause would limit the use of the council’s “article 7,” which stipulates that any conference on human rights would hold a separate discussion of human rights in Israel and the West Bank. Israel is the only state in the world subject to such a separate discussion.

    Within the outline under negotiations, Western European states would commit not to make any speeches at so-called “article 7” discussions. The European commitment would last for the next two human rights conferences, which are set to take place during the next two years. A unanimous vote would be required to reverse this limitation and resume the “article 7” discussions, which will prove very difficult to achieve.

    Over the next two days, discussions on the outline will continue among the Western member nations, in an attempt to achieve a consensus. The two obstacles to such a consensus are Turkey, which has yet to agree to allow Israel to join the group, and a few states,including Ireland, Lichtenstein and Iceland, which have expressed reservations regarding commitments to refrain from making speeches during “article 7” meetings.

    “It’s all done, and we’re waiting to get an official decision from the Europeans,” said a senior Foreign Ministry official. “If the outline is adopted, it will be a green light for renewing cooperation between Israel and the UN Human Rights Council.” 

    A decision on the matter must be reached in the next few days due to the fact that on Tuesday, Israel is supposed to appear in the periodical proceedings of the UN Human Rights Council, called the Universal Periodic Review, or UPR. The UPR consists of a hearing once every few years, during which every UN member state gives an account of human rights in its territory. The UPR is a cornerstone of international human rights.

    If the outline is not passed by the weekend, Israel will not appear at the UPR, and will become the first state to boycott the periodic hearing. As a result, Israel would likely receive harsh criticism from the international community, and would be considered responsible for creating a precedent that would allow nations like Iran, Syria, and North Korea to refuse to appear at such hearings in the future.

  • UN to aid Palestinian victims of settler violence in West Bank - Diplomacy & Defense - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/un-to-aid-palestinian-victims-of-settler-violence-in-west-bank.premium-1.52

    The United Nations is formulating a plan to provide emergency aid to Palestinians harmed by settler violence in the West Bank, Haaretz has learned. The move is said to be a consequence of the increased number of violent attacks, including bodily harm and damage to property (including the torching of cars and fields).

    The Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority do not operate orderly mechanisms for providing compensation to the victims of violence in such cases. The United Nations’ Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR - not related to the UN Human Rights Council, a body which Israel accuses of discriminating against it) is working on a systematic program on the matter. It is now working out the criteria, and looking for international organizations to provide the aid.

    The aid will not only include monetary grants but also other means. The aid will be given on an individual basis, and the UN will estimate the damage in each specific case.

    The PA does not currently provide any real aid to Palestinians who have been harmed in such cases. A Palestinian official told Haaretz that “the responsibility belongs to Israel, which controls the settlers. We have no resources.”

    The official added that “when they [settlers] set fire to a mosque, there is no problem to raise donations in an hour to repair the mosque. To raise help for private individuals is harder.”

    Israel does not compensate Palestinians harmed by Jewish nationalistic activities when they are located in the territories, since they are not included under the law on victims of hate crimes. In comparison, Israeli Arabs and Palestinians who enter Israel legally and then injured by Jewish violence, are entitled to compensation from the National Insurance Institute and the Tax Authority.

    Israel also operates a committee for granting compensation above and beyond the strict requirements of the law for nationalistic acts, which compensates Palestinians. The committee was established in 1999 at the recommendation of then Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein (now a Supreme Court justice).

    The regulations governing such compensation were published and took effect in 2000. The criteria set for receiving compensation are, firstly, that the Benefits for Victims of Hostilities Law does not apply to them, that the party that caused the injury was not the Israel Defense Forces, and the injured party is not conducting any civil procedures against the state.

    At the same time there is another committee, the “Others Committee,” that compensates Palestinians harmed by the IDF, above and beyond the strict requirements of the law. This committee has only a small amount of activity and pays out sums to the tune of hundreds of thousands of shekels a year. Although the committee is not a secret, it does not have a website, and the Defense Ministry’s website has no details of how to contact the committee.

    This committee has handled a number of cases - for example, Palestinians whose property was damaged during the 2008 riots after the evacuation of the Brown House in Hebron.

    Channel 10 reported this week that Israel recently paid NIS 114,000 to a Palestinian who received head injuries after a rock was thrown at him in the area near Yitzhar.

    A Palestinian beaten near Ramallah received NIS 27,000, another Palestinian whose car was set on fire received NIS 28,000, and a Palestinian whose olive grove was destroyed received NIS 20,000.

  • The Chilling Words of Syria’s President
    By Sanjeev Bery
    http://blog.amnestyusa.org/middle-east/the-chilling-words-of-syrias-president

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad gives a rare rare televised speech delivered in parliament on June 3, 2012. Assad said that his government faces a foreign plot to destroy Syria, and blamed ’monsters’ for the Houla massacre. (Photo Louai Beshara/AFP/GettyImages)

    Yesterday, Syrian President Bashar Assad justified his government’s actions by comparing himself to a doctor trying to save a patient. As reported by the Associated Press, Assad stated in a speech:

    When a surgeon in an operating room … cuts and cleans and amputates, and the wound bleeds, do we say to him your hands are stained with blood? Or do we thank him for saving the patient?

    The disturbing words come against a backdrop of horrifying violence. Amnesty International has received the names of nearly 10,000 people killed since the government began cracking down on peaceful protestors over a year ago. Although peaceful demonstrations have continued, the unrest has turned increasingly violent. Armed opposition groups, many loosely under the umbrella of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), have also carried out attacks – mainly against Syrian security forces.

    Abuses by opposition forces have also been reported. These abuses haved included the torture or killing of captured members of the Syrian army, security forces, and pro-government gangs known as shabiha — as well as perceived supporters of the government and suspected informers. In some parts of the country, the situation appears to have evolved into a non-international armed conflict between government and opposition forces.

    On Friday, the UN Human Rights Council held a special session to focus on the human rights crisis in Syria. The call for the session was backed by 51 nations, and it came in the aftermath of the recent attack by Syrian forces on the Syrian town of Houla, in which 108 individuals were killed, including 50 children. Sources have told Amnesty International that on May 25th, the residential area of Teldo in Houla came under a barrage of shells, mortars, and rockets, as well as raids.

    My colleagues in London and Geneva described the following events in a statement submitted to the Council on the eve of the UN special session:

    According to the eye witness, artillery shells and rockets were fired into areas of Houla by the Syrian military from around 8pm on Friday until around midnight, at times falling at the rate of one per minute. Sixty-two of those killed were from the Abd al-Razaq family in Teldo. All had been shot dead, except for a few children whose skulls had been smashed, presumably by rifle butts.

    In the aftermath of the assault, the UN Human Rights Council voted to condemn the violence. The vote was 41 in favor of the condemnation, 3 against and 2 abstentions. Uganda and Ecuador abstained, and Russia, China, and Cuba all voted against the measure. Both Russia and China have been consistent obstacles to UN action to stop the violence in Syria. You can urge Russian diplomats to change their position by emailing the Russian government today.

    Amnesty International is calling on the UN Security Council to impose an arms embargo that will stop the transfer of arms and equipment to Syrian government forces. We are also calling on the UN Security Council to refer the situation in Syria to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and to freeze the assets abroad of the Syrian President and his senior associates.

    Unfortunately, Russia and China have both used their threatened vetoes at the UN Security Council to block such actions. Not only that, but other UN Security Council members have yet to support referring the matter to the ICC. As my colleague Donatella Rovera stated in The Washington Post:

    Because there has been no international consensus yet on action, those perpetrating violence and destruction in Syria are comfortable that they can continue to behave as though they are above the law.

    Which brings us back to the reported words of Assad — profoundly disturbing talk of blood, amputation, and “saving the patient.”

    In a climate of impunity, anything becomes possible.

    To make matters worse, local human rights NGOs in recent months have received the names of over 18,000 Syrians who have been detained by Syrian authorities, and they have said that the number of actual detainees could be double. Torture and brutality are all likely experiences for anyone held by the Syria authorities today.