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U.N. Rights Chief Blasts
Terror War
Departing U.N. Rights Chief Mary Robinson
Says Terror Fight Is Trampling on Civil Liberties
The Associated Press
G E N E V A, Sept. 7 - Departing
U.N. human rights chief Mary Robinson, in a bleak assessment
of the state of human rights, accused governments of hiding behind
the ongoing war on terrorism to trample civil liberties and crush
troublesome opponents.
"Suddenly the T-word is
used all the time," Robinson said, referring to terrorism.
"And that's the problem."
The United States, Russia and
China were among the nations she said were ignoring civil rights
in the name of combating international terrorist groups.
"Everything is justified
by that T-word," the 58-year-old former Irish president
said in an interview with The Associated Press. "I hope
that countries will put human rights back on the agenda because
it tended to slip after September 11."
Robinson argued the Bush administration
set the tone by holding detainees from Afghanistan without charge
at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. She also criticized
Washington's opposition to the new International Criminal Court.
"The world needs leadership
in human rights and the United States could give great leadership.
It's not giving it at the moment, unfortunately," said Robinson,
who leaves her post Wednesday.
When Robinson took other governments
to task for abuses in the post-Sept. 11 era, they often cited
the United States as an example in arguing that human rights
standards have changed, she said.
"And I've had to say the
standards have not changed," Robinson said.
"The United States must
be seen to fully uphold international human rights and humanitarian
standards. The attacks on New York didn't just kill many innocent
people they were an attack on freedom and democracy, and we must
uphold these standards. And we can do that and effectively combat
terrorism."
Robinson said a number of countries
were using the excuse of fighting terrorism to clamp down on
legitimate opposition and curtail freedom of expression. She
singled out Russian military operations in the restive republic
of Chechnya and China's clampdowns on Muslim Uigurs and in Tibet.
It was Robinson's willingness
to use her office as U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
to criticize such big powers that made her a darling of activists
like Amnesty International. But it ultimately caused her downfall.
Robinson initially wanted to
quit last year at the end of her four-year term, saying she was
frustrated by a lack of funding. She was persuaded by U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan to stay an additional year, then she let it be known
she was willing to remain in office until 2005.
That offer was declined, diplomats
have said, because of U.S. annoyance at her criticism of the
Guantanamo detention camp and her perceived anti-Israel stance,
and anger in Moscow over her persistent clamoring for an inquiry
into the suppression of Chechen rebels.
"I do most of the work constructively,
diplomatically ... but there are times when there must be a voice
in the United Nations for the victims of violations," Robinson
said.
One of Robinson's last visits
was to China, where she said she had mixed feelings.
On the one hand, she said, China
has made big strides in technical programs to educate police,
prison officers and judges about human rights treaties.
"But on the side of the
reality of human rights, I'm very worried," she said, citing
recent arrests of labor leaders to quell unrest, the detention
of a well-known AIDS activist and the continuing widespread use
of the death penalty.
Despite her gloomy overall assessment,
Robinson said she took heart from her perception that human rights
are being increasingly accepted as a fundamental part of development.
Asked what she considered the
worst human rights violation, she said, "Extreme poverty."
She said the United States, in particular, needs to show more
recognition of economic and social rights.
Robinson said she felt no bitterness
at being eased out, saying she will be campaigning for a "more
ethical globalization and a fairer world." She also wants
to use her contacts to tap universities and foundations for more
resources to promote human rights in developing countries.
Robinson said she was confident
that her successor, Sergio Vieira de Mello, a Brazilian diplomat
who headed the interim U.N. administration in East Timor, is
capable and committed.
And she offers him one bit of
advice given to her by an Irish poet friend: "If you become
too popular in that job, you're probably not doing a good job."
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