Israel slams candidacy of Iran and Syria for U.N. rights body

Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations warned that electing Iran and Syria to the United Nations Human Rights Council would create a discrediting conflict of interest.

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(JTA) — Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations warned that electing Iran and Syria to the United Nations Human Rights Council would create a discrediting conflict of interest.

“It’s like placing a mob boss in charge of the witness protection program,” Ambassador Ron Prosor said Thursday. He was reacting to reports that Iran and Syria planned to run for open seats on the council’s 47-member body.

The General Assembly’s annual elections for the Geneva-based Human Rights Council will be held later this year in New York. There will be 14 seats available for three-year terms beginning in January.

Hillel Neuer, the head of UN Watch, a Geneva-based advocacy group that monitors the work of the United Nations, said, “Countries that murder and torture their own people must not be allowed to become the world’s judges on human rights.”

Neuer noted that both regimes recently were elected to other U.N. human rights panels – Iran on the women’s rights commission, and Syria on UNESCO’s, the U.N.’s science and culture affiliate.

Philippe Bolopion of Human Rights Watch said, “Syria’s candidacy, if maintained, would be a cruel joke, but would almost certainly be met with a resounding defeat.”

Last year the United States was reelected to the rights council. Washington often has criticized the council for what it sees as the unfair singling-out of Israel while ignoring severe rights abuses by other countries.

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