Missing Voice on Human Rights
Launching the World Report 2007, Human Rights Watch (HRW) calling on the EU for a more progressive and leading role on the current international human rights scene, to fill the current leadership void. HRW press release posted below:
EU Should Fill Leadership Void on Human Rights
Human Rights Watch Launches World Report 2007 on
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Today marks five years since the
"Since the
Human Rights Watch lamented the "lowest common denominator approach" to rights protection by EU member states, in which governments that favor accommodation drag down those seeking a tougher approach to serious rights abuses. Examples include the EU's backtracking on the sanctions it imposed following the May 2005 massacre in the Uzbek city of Andijan and its weak response to the 2005 royal coup in Nepal. Similarly, while abusive governments banded together to block effective action at the United Nations' new Human Rights Council, the EU's ability to respond was crippled by its micromanaging approach and need for consensus.
The report identifies many human rights challenges in need of urgent attention.
No situation is more pressing than the bloody crisis in
The conflict is now destabilizing
"Civilians in Darfur are under constant attack and the conflict is spilling across
US abuses against detainees in the "war on terror" remain a major concern.
In September, President George W Bush even defended torture - referring to it euphemistically as "an alternative set of [interrogation] procedures" - and secret CIA prisons. In October, the US Congress, acting at the behest of the Bush administration, denied
"The new US Congress must act now to remedy the worst abuses of the Bush administration," Roth said. "Without firm and principled congressional action, the loss of
Human Rights Watch noted some positive developments coming out of the global South, including African leaders' support for the human rights trials of former Liberian President Charles Taylor and former Chadian President Hissène Habré, and Latin American support for the International Criminal Court. But it also urged southern democracies to do more to support human rights, such as by breaking with abusive regional leaders to play a more constructive role at the UN Human Rights Council.
"Because many new democracies of the global South have emerged from periods of extreme repression, whether colonialism, apartheid or dictatorship, they could have special moral authority on human rights,"
Roth said. "But few have shown the consistency and commitment to emerge as real human rights leaders."
Human Rights Watch's World Report 2007 contains survey information on human rights developments during 2006 in more than 75 countries. In addition to the introductory essay on the European Union, the volume contains essays on freedom of expression since 9/11, the plight of migrant domestic workers, and a human rights agenda for incoming UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.