From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 5 May 2001 06:53:04 -0700
To: "CubaNews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CubaNews] Powell: U.S. Shocked by Loss of HRC Seat

Saturday, May 5, 2001
U.S. Shocked by Loss of Seat on U.N.
Rights Panel but Vows to Stay Active
By ROBIN WRIGHT, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON--The Bush administration admitted Friday that
the United States had lost its seat on the U.N. Human Rights
Commission this week after receiving "solid, written
assurances" of support from 43 countries in advance--only to
get just 29 votes during the secret ballot.

Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said he was astonished and
disappointed at the outcome, ending more than half a century
in which the United States was the moral anchor of a group
co-founded by former U.N. delegate and First Lady Eleanor
Roosevelt.

American diplomats had campaigned hard in New York, Geneva,
Washington and several foreign capitals, the State Department
said Friday. Powell blamed the vote in part on unease about
some U.S. policies on human rights and other initiatives. He
also said some countries were "ganging up" on the United
States to "thwart our efforts."

Cuba, a member of the commission, crowed Friday that
American arrogance and coercion used to achieve its agenda in
international bodies cost the United States a seat it had held
since 1947. China charged that Washington has used human
rights as a political weapon. China and Cuba had been targets
of U.S.-backed resolutions criticizing their human rights
practices during the 53-member commission's annual
meeting in Geneva this year.

The administration tried to downplay the damage. White House
spokesman Ari Fleischer said the loss would not stop President
Bush from speaking out about the importance of human rights
around the world, as he did Thursday in a speech about
religious persecution, particularly in Sudan.

Sudan was one of the countries elected to the commission
Thursday. Also on the committee are serious human rights
violators such as Algeria, China, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Sierra
Leone, Syria, Togo, Uganda and Vietnam. Democracies
are now a distinct minority on the commission.

"This is a rogues' gallery of human rights abusers," said
Joanna Weschler, U.N. representative of Human Rights Watch, a
New York-based monitoring group.

At the same time, she said Washington had recently been "on
the wrong side" of human rights issues, opposing a land mine
ban, an international criminal court and universal access to
AIDS medications, which had cost votes from friends.

Powell warned that the U.S. defeat and the membership of
countries such as Cuba and Sudan send a "shocking
message." Although it has lost the right to vote and introduce
resolutions, Washington will continue to work with the
commission by lobbying as an observer, he said.

Other U.S. officials conceded in private that they were
stunned by the diplomatic disaster and the failure of
Washington to win votes even from allies. "This is a very
negative and worrisome signal, not just because we lost the
seat," said a U.S. official involved in human rights who asked
to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the topic.

"It's one way to express dissatisfaction with the U.S. without
breaking relations. And it's a secret vote, so it's an
opportunity for countries to get back at us or diminish our
influence. The biggest danger is that it sets a dangerous
precedent," the official said.

He said there was a "league of nondemocratic states"
determined to silence the U.S. voice.

The vote has endangered more than $600 million in back
payments due the United Nations and approved by the House
International Relations Committee just a day before the
election. House members from both parties have indicated that
they will contest the funding when it goes to the full House
next week.

In other foreign policy developments, Powell predicted in a
wide-ranging interview with diplomatic reporters Friday that
tensions with China, stoked by the April 1 collision between a
U.S. surveillance plane and a Chinese fighter jet, would soon
end.

Beijing is cooperating on the issue of the damaged plane still
stranded on Hainan island, although the process has been
hampered by some "irritants and hiccups," he said. At the
same time, however, he said the United States is engaged in
reviewing all future contacts and exchanges with China.

On North Korea, Powell said he welcomed Pyongyang's
pledge--made during a visit this week by European Union
envoys--to extend a moratorium on the sale of ballistic
missiles. He said the Bush administration has continued
low-level contacts started during the previous administration
through North Korea's U.N. mission.

As for Iraq, Powell said the State Department was quietly
working to build Security Council support for a streamlined
sanctions policy on Baghdad.


Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times



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