UNITED NATIONS, Aug 5 (IPS) - Member
states of the U.N. have frequently disregarded international human
rights laws and principles in the name of counter-terrorism, an expert
panel here found. The panel entitled 'Fortress or Sand-Castle? Human
Rights in the Age of Counter-Terrorism', was the seventh installment of
the New Human Rights Dialogue Series, a 12 part monthly series in
commemoration of the sixtieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights. The 30 articles of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights "read today very much like a catalogue of abuses, and quite
often abuses carried out in the name of something called
counter-terrorism," said Craig Mokhiber, of the Office of the U.N. High
Commissioner for Human Rights, who moderated the panel.
Some areas of concern with regards to counter-terrorism stressed by the
panelists are the expansion of police powers, use of secret courts and
evidence, use of preventative detention, and the application of the
death penalty for non-lethal crimes. "Counter- terrorism laws passed
worldwide have represented a broad expansion of government power to
investigate detain, prosecute, and imprison individuals with minimal
judicial oversight, public transparency, and due process," said Joanne
Mariner, terrorism and counter- terrorism programme director at Human
Rights Watch. These laws restrict the rights of terrorists, political
dissidents, social activists, and common criminals, according to
Mariner. The legislation is partly the result of the lack of an
international definition for terrorism, without which countries are
allowed to create their own broad definitions of what constitutes a
terrorist organisation or act. Human rights violations resulting from
laws based on these broad definitions are exacerbated by international
pressure from the Security Council for member states to show that they
are combating terrorism domestically. The U.S. among other nations has
attempted to justify the derogation of certain international human
rights laws by claiming that the "war on terror" is a new kind of armed
confl ict that lies outside of international human rights law and
warrants the creation of a new structure of humanitarian law. Margaret
Satterthwaite, co-director of the international human rights clinic at
the centre of human rights and global justice at New York University
School of Law, noted that, "this argument has been rejected by a number
of key high courts of various member states of the U.N. and even if one
were to accept such an argument, one would still be under the rule of
international humanitarian principles of customary international law
when forging those new rules."
The panellists explained that the Security Council has been slow to
incorporate human rights into its global counter-terrorism strategy.
Joanna Weschler, director of research of the Security Council Report --
a non-profit organisation affiliated with Columbia University --
described the Council's progress on integrating human rights into the
counter-terrorism strategy as a, "process of slow and partial
overcoming of a very deep reluctance." Weschler recalled that, "Council
members were initially quite adamant that the Council would not make
safeguarding human rights part of its anti-terror agenda and I remember
very vividly in that period when a P5 ambassador said to me, Joanna
dont expect to see the two words human and rights together in any
council documents on terrorism any time soon, and I must say they kept
their word for a while."
Weschler referenced Security Council resolution 1390, which expanded
the Council's sanctions on Afghanistan to be applicable worldwide. One
result of this resolution was the creation of a list of individuals and
entities that could be subjected to asset freezes, travel bans, and
other sanctions -- but there were no clear rules governing how parties
were placed or removed from the list. And once listed, parties could
not fi nd out the reason for their listing or challenge it. Numerous
cases of mistaken identity, post-mortem listing of individuals, and
other human rights violations stemmed from the creation of the list,
Weschler said.
The original sanctions were imposed on the Taliban in part because of
their violation of human rights and were supported by human rights
groups because they targeted governing bodies as opposed to citizens.
To date the Security Council members have raised strong opposition to
the creation of an independent review panel for the list. Although
there are many areas in which human rights continue to be neglected,
the Security Council and other U.N. bodies have recently begun to take
significant steps towards integrating human rights into
counter-terrorist activities.
The 2006 U.N. Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy lists human rights as
one of its 4 pillars and states that, "the promotion and protection of
human rights for all and the rule of law is essential to all components
of the Strategy, recognising that effective counter-terrorism measures
and the protection of human rights are not conflicting goals, but
complementary and mutually reinforcing." The fi nal document of the
International Process on Global Counter-Terrorism Cooperation has
recently been released and lists numerous recommendations for the
General Assembly to consider in advance of the fi rst formal review of
the of the U.N. Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy in September. Among
the recommendations the document lists are numerous enhancements of
U.N. efforts to promote human rights within the context of
counter-terrorism including further inclusion of human rights experts
within the counter- terrorist bodies of the U.N. and greater support
for the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. Emi MacLean
of the Centre for Constitutional Rights concluded, "There seem to be
varying options as we move forward. We could see international rights
and humanitarian obligations as inapplicable to the current paradigm
and forcing a paradigm shift or we can reaffirm that [human rights]
laws continue to have resonance and import and indeed continue to carry
obligations even, or perhaps, especially within this context when we
are tempted to derogate from them."