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Learn about the functions and procedures of the UN Commission on Human Rights within the United Nations system, including the 1503 and 1235 procedures and the key role it plays in promoting human rights globally.
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I. The United Nations - its purposes, functions, structure • The purposes and principles of the United Nations are set forth in the United Nations Charter which came into force on October 24, 1945. One of the aims of the Charter is: • "...To achieve international co-operation in solving international problems of an economic, social, cultural or humanitarian character, and in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion...." • The Charter of the United Nations also provides for the 6 principle organs of the United Nations: • 1. General Assembly • 2. Security Council • 3. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) • 4. Trusteeship Council • 5. International Court of Justice • 6. Secretariat
II. The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) • The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) is an organ of special significance in the UN structure, particularly in economic, social, cultural, educational, health and human rights matters. • It consists of 54 members who meet twice a year. ECOSOC carries out its functions in the form of numerous committees and commissions (i.e. Commission on Human Rights, the Sub-Commission for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights) and specialized agencies (i.e. International Labor Organization [ILO], World Health Organization [WHO]).
II. The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) • The Economic and Social Council plays a specific role in the area of human rights. Article 68 of the UN Charter requires the Council to set up a commission to promote human rights. • On February 16, 1946, the Commission on Human Rights was founded. It is made up of 54 members who serve for three-year terms. The Economic and Social Council gave the Commission the major task of drafting international human rights treaties, including The Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • Initially concerned with elaborating standards (drafted UDHR, ICCPR, ICESCR) • “no power to take action in regard to any complaints concerning human rights” (ECOSOC 1947) • In response to pressure to act on racism in South Africa, ECOSOC changed its mind by adopting Res. 1235 in 1967
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • 1235 Procedure: authorized the Commission on Human Rights and its Sub-Commission to examine information relating to gross human rights violations • South Africa, Namibia, and Rhodesia were the initial States subject to the 1235 procedure
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • Public nature of 1235 procedure made states nervous, so they created a new, confidential procedure called the 1503 Procedure • 1235 (public debate) • 1503 (confidential debate)
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • 1503 Procedure: • Petition-information procedure (not petition-reparation procedure) • Activated by complaints from NGO sources that reveal: “a consistent pattern of gross and reliably attested violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms” (Res. 1503)
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • 1503 Procedure: • Who may submit a communication? • Anyone with direct and reliable knowledge of violations • Against what State? • Any UN Member State!!! • UN Commission has different source of authority than the treaty bodies (UN Charter v. individual treaty)
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • 1503 Procedure: Procedural Req’s • No anonymity, but confidentiality can be requested • Must not be “based exclusively on reports disseminated by mass media” • Must explain how domestic remedies have been exhausted (applied loosely in practice- Why???) • Must be submitted within a reasonable time after exhaustion
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights • 1503 Procedure: Substantive Req’s • Must show the existence of a consistent pattern of gross violations (how can individual cases be brought in?) • Torture, disappearances, extra-judicial killings, arbitrary detention, freedom of movement • The more widespread, the need to show “gross” violation is diminished and vice-versa • Must contain evidence and indicate which rights have been violated (basically, the communication will look like a brief)
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights States reviewed under 1503 Procedure (through 2006) • Africa: 32 States have been targeted (27 under 1503 procedure, 18 under 1235 procedure, 13 under both) • Asia: 30 States (27 under 1503 procedure, 13 under 1235 procedure, 9 under both) • Latin America: 19 States (16 under 1503 procedure, 10 under 1235 procedure, 7 under both) • Eastern Europe: 18 States (10 under 1503 procedure, 9 under 1235 procedure, 1 under both) • Western States: 7 States (6 under 1503 procedure, 3 under 1235 procedure, 2 under both) • http://www.ishr.ch/handbook/Annexes/CommProcs/1503outcms.pdf
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights Why use the 1503 Procedure?
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights Why use the 1503 Procedure? BECAUSE OF WHAT IT CAN LEAD TO: • 1235 public discussion in the Commission • Creation of a “Special Procedure” • Asking SG to establish direct contacts • Asking the Government for further info • Keep the situation “under review”
III. The Special Procedures 28 Thematic Mandates 13 Country Mandates
III. The Special Procedures Mandate Powers Functions Outputs Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G06/121/27/PDF/G0612127.pdf?OpenElement
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights States reviewed under 1503 Procedure (through 2006) • Africa: 32 States have been targeted (27 under 1503 procedure, 18 under 1235 procedure, 13 under both) • Asia: 30 States (27 under 1503 procedure, 13 under 1235 procedure, 9 under both) • Latin America: 19 States (16 under 1503 procedure, 10 under 1235 procedure, 7 under both) • Eastern Europe: 18 States (10 under 1503 procedure, 9 under 1235 procedure, 1 under both) • Western States: 7 States (6 under 1503 procedure, 3 under 1235 procedure, 2 under both) • http://www.ishr.ch/handbook/Annexes/CommProcs/1503outcms.pdf
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights States reviewed under 1503 Procedure (through 2006) • Africa: 32 States have been targeted (27 under 1503 procedure, 18 under 1235 procedure, 13 under both) • Asia: 30 States (27 under 1503 procedure, 13 under 1235 procedure, 9 under both) • Latin America: 19 States (16 under 1503 procedure, 10 under 1235 procedure, 7 under both) • Eastern Europe: 18 States (10 under 1503 procedure, 9 under 1235 procedure, 1 under both) • Western States: 7 States (6 under 1503 procedure, 3 under 1235 procedure, 2 under both) • http://www.ishr.ch/handbook/Annexes/CommProcs/1503outcms.pdf
II. The UN Commission on Human Rights States reviewed under 1503 Procedure (through 2006) • Africa: 32 States have been targeted (27 under 1503 procedure, 18 under 1235 procedure, 13 under both) • Asia: 30 States (27 under 1503 procedure, 13 under 1235 procedure, 9 under both) • Latin America: 19 States (16 under 1503 procedure, 10 under 1235 procedure, 7 under both) • Eastern Europe: 18 States (10 under 1503 procedure, 9 under 1235 procedure, 1 under both) • Western States: 7 States (6 under 1503 procedure, 3 under 1235 procedure, 2 under both) • http://www.ishr.ch/handbook/Annexes/CommProcs/1503outcms.pdf
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F. Reports of the procedure established in accordance with Economic and Social Council resolutions 1503 (XLVIII) and 2000/3 (confidential procedure) • The Council considered the reports of the procedure established in accordance with Economic and Social Council resolutions 1503 (XLVIII) and 2000/3 in two closed meetings, at its 12th meeting on 19 March, and at its 22nd meeting on 26 March 2007, pursuant to paragraph 7 of Economic and Social Council resolution 2000/3 of 16 June 2000. The Council had before it for consideration the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran and Uzbekistan. • At the 23rd meeting, on 26 March 2007, the President announced publicly that the Council had decided to discontinue the consideration of the human rights situations in the Islamic Republic of Iran and Uzbekistan. • The President reminded the members of the Council that, in conformity with paragraph 9 of Economic and Social Council resolution 2000/3, they should not make any reference in public debate to the confidential decisions taken under that resolution or to any confidential material relating thereto.
Weaknesses • Not an primary body of UN • No explicit criteria for membership • No significant reduction in size • Only majority vote required to be elected • Potential for duplication
Strengths • Universal peer review mechanism • Maintains the best of the Commission • Extended time for dialogue • Emphasis on follow-up • Suspension provision • Elections
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