Foreign Affairs Minister, John Baird officially called on the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to remove Falk from his position, arguing ‘Falk’s consistently mean-spirited comments cast a dark shadow over the United Nations and what it can accomplish. Comments like these do a great disservice to the fundamental values of the United Nations and to all freedom-loving people.’
A few days later, grudgingly giving three UN rapporteurs permission to probe Canada’s record on human rights, treatment of aboriginals and discrimination against women, Canada complained, ‘Some countries, like Iran, reviewing Canada have abhorrent human rights records. Canada stated that Iran ‘hangs guys and stones women.’
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Government
have objected to Falk because he has been mean-spirited. Now is Richard Falk
the first UN official to utter mean-spirited opinion? Have they not heard of the boss-lady of
UNHRC, Navineethan Pillay? When she was
mouthing the mean on Sri Lanka (while being ‘tokenist’ on the USA and EU),
wasn’t Canada listening? What then of
the much vaunted ‘fundamental values’ of the UN? What then of service and disservice, did
Baird and Harper ask themselves? Or is
it all about ‘You can be mean to anyone but not to my friends and certainly not
to me’?
Now Falk may have outdone himself in bypassing perpetrator
and picking on Washington, but there’s no denying that incidents (even bomb
explosions) and people (including marathon-bombers and drone-bombers) have
histories. Weapons have manufacturers and require markets (to be created if
necessary). And the world has known ‘our terrorists’ and ‘their terrorists’,
the former being ‘ok’ and the other responded to with ‘license to kill’.
But what of the second gripe, that of moral authority? Canada objects to Iran. Canada does not object to the USA,
though. Sure, the USA is not exactly
investigating Canada, but the principle must be observed across the board or
abandoned altogether, wouldn’t Canada agree?
The United States hangs people (and let’s not talk about the
scandalously monumental profits that corporates obtain from the US
prison-industrial complex). The USA is
not known to stone women, but what they toss on innocent men, women and
children are not exactly pebbles. We are
talking about all the wars in the 20th and 21st
Centuries. We are talking about Kissinger’s infamous defence of President
Richard Nixon (‘He wants a massive bombing campaign in Cambodia. He doesn't
want to hear anything about it. It's an order, to be done. Anything that
flies on anything that moves.) which in all fairness to the man is
applicable to many who came before and everyone who came after Nixon, right up
to Barak Obama, the drone attacks, rendering, sanctioned torture, Guantanamo
Bay, Abu Ghraib and the arming of terrorists.
So when such a country brings a motion against Sri Lanka,
what does Canada do? Canada cheers! So does Harper and his Government wonder why
few are commiserating with Canada in her hour of anguish?
Canada has shown displeasure about the UN team. If the UNHRC wanted ‘untrammeled access’
(meaning hordes of investigators, rapporteurs and Channel-4 like spin-masters),
would Canada say ‘ok’ in subdued tones? Probably not.
Sri Lanka has cooperated with the UNHRC within the norms of
the UN Charter and global standard practices as exemplified by ‘developed’,
rich, ‘respected’ Governments such as Canada.
So Canada is boycotting the Commonwealth Heads of
Governments Meeting (CHOGM). It’s about
Sri Lanka’s position with respect to moves orchestrated by the USA in the
United Nations. Is Canada confused or
just self-absorbed? Has Harper not heard
about sauces, about the goose and the gander?
One wonders...
2 comments:
If there's 100 peace in the world; the weapons industries loses: planes, 'copters, armour, uniforms et al. If all people's diseases could be cured; the drug companies lose.
We, the ordinary people are a vast growing market that has to be "nurture". We are chickens in the global market farm and we feed on the grain they throw us. Upstarts who upset this equilibrium are eliminated. So watch it!
What is also documented is that during the Vietnam war, US soldiers were apt at pushing out Viet cong suspects from helicopters in mid-air. In another incident after the video evidence of the My Lai massacre, Lt. Calley was convicted of war crimes but his punishment was akin to a long holiday and even from that he was freed a couple of years ago.
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