Several dozen representatives held a protest against Washington’s ineffective policies.
Dozens of activists held a demonstration before a sitting of the UN’s independent Human Rights Committee in Geneva on Wednesday, as US Ambassador to the organization’s Human Rights Council Michele Taylor delivered a speech defending Washington’s human rights record.
According to the Associated Press, as many as 140 protesters traveled from Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Guam, among others, to protest Taylor’s speech. When she began her address, the activists, who were sitting throughout the chamber, stood up and turned their backs to the US ambassador.
Taylor’s speech came amid the first scheduled US human rights record review in nine years. The Human Rights Committee evaluated the country’s efforts and uphold its commitments under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
ENOUGH! Today the Dignity Delegation along w/civil society orgs from the US turned our backs in silent protest against the US Ambassador Michelle Taylor as she spoke at the end of the #UN Human Rights Cttee Review of the US. Protect our dignity & human rights. #StartWithDignity pic.twitter.com/Xj7Yd1K77o
— startwithdignity (@startwdignity) October 18, 2023
The ambassador insisted that Washington’s commitment to the treaty was “a moral imperative at the very heart of our democracy” and claimed that the US “leads by example through our transparency, our openness and our humble approach to our own human rights challenges.”
“You have heard over the past two days about many of the concrete ways we are meeting our obligations under the convention, and you have also heard our pledge to do more,” said Taylor, adding that she recognizes that “the topics raised are often painful for all of us to discuss.”
However, US representatives who had traveled to the event to share their personal stories of pain and trauma said that the US delegation “decided to stick to scripted, general, and often meaningless responses” to questions from the Human Rights Committee.
“At times it seemed that AI-generated responses would have been more qualitative,” said Jamil Dakwar, the human rights program director at the American Civil Liberties Union.
“We all feel deceived by a government that has said it is going to do better than the administrations before it but has simply just repeated language out of binders they brought and websites they read and did not meaningfully engage in the topics we had shared with them,” Alliance San Diego Executive Director Andrea Guerrero was quoted as saying by the TAG24 News.
“Their words are meaningless without actions,” she added. “Actions speak louder than words. That’s why we turned our backs today.”
The UN Human Rights Committee regularly reviews the observance of human rights by all countries that have signed the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Currently, the pact has been ratified by 173 states.
The treatment of the J6 prisoners shows that the US does NOT respect human rights when it chooses not to: Moving prisoners around to different facilities so that their own families do not know where they are, solitary confinement, sleep denial with lights on all night and so on. Bloody disgusting that this is going on in the US.
Too right, disgusting outfit not fit to be called a democracy….
The US governments attitude to human right and war is a disgrace and not an example to be emulated in New Zealand or elsewhere. Time was all turned our backs on them and any immoral government supporting them, including here in New Zealand.
if you want really things to change, you will have to remove your own government by force. And lock all borders. That is called a revolution.
Uprising might come when all our assets will be confiscated. But you need police and army cooperating.