"I see no objection": UN adopts report praising Qatar's human rights record after UN Watch lists objections
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"I see no objection": UN adopts report praising Qatar's human rights record after UN Watch lists objections
Intervention
by UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer in debate over UN Human
Rights Council report on Qatar’s human rights record, September 19, 2014
Thank you, Mr. President. Today
we ask: Does the cause of human rights support — or object to — the
adoption of today’s UN Human Rights Council report on Qatar’s human
rights record?
Let me read from the report:
Mr. President, no
less than 78 out of the 84 country statements in this report offer
praise for the human rights record of Qatar. That’s over 90 percent.
Yet the truth, Mr. President, is the opposite.
Let us be clear: The truth is that the 1.4 million migrant workers in Qatar object
to this report because they are dying at the rate of one a day from
inhuman conditions. At the current pace, more than 4,000 migrant workers
will die to build the infrastructure for Qatar’s 2022 World Cup.
The truth is that the women of Qatar object
to this report because they are denied basic rights to equality, for
example denied the right to be elected to the Shura legislative council.
The truth is that journalists and aid workers who are abducted by the ISIS terrorist group and face beheading object
to this report. In the words of Germany’s development aid minister,
Gerd Mueller, from August 20th: “Who is financing these troops? Hint:
Qatar.”
The
truth is that the Palestinians, Israelis ,and other victims of Hamas
war crimes — their exploitation and targeting of civilian populations,
mosques, hospitals and schools — object to this report.
As one Arab diplomat said to the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD), as quoted in its testimony before the U.S. Congress, “Qatar finances Hamas strongly.”
Mr. President, for all of these reasons, let me be clear: the victims of human rights abuse around the world object to the adoption of this report.
Thank you, Mr. President.
[...]
President of UNHRC Session:
May I now propose that the Council adopt the decision of the UPR on
Qatar as appears on screen. I see no objection. The decision is adopted.
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Labels: Human Rights, Human Rights Watch, Qatar, Terrorism, United Nations
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