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                                                                                                March 13, 2020

United Nations Issues: U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for


Human Rights
The U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR, or the Office) is the primary U.N.
administrative body that addresses human rights. The
United States generally funds the Office through assessed
contributions to the U.N. regular budget (between $18-
$20.5 million a year), and voluntary contributions (between
$5-$15 million over the past five years). Since FY2018, the
Trump Administration has withheld assessed U.S. funding
from the Office, possibly due to concerns regarding its
activities related to the Palestinians and its work with the
U.N. Human Rights Council (the Council). (The United
States withdrew from the Council in 2018 due to concerns
about its disproportionate focus on Israel and perceived
inability to effectively address human rights issues.) Some
Members of Congress agree that the withholding is merited;
others view OHCHR as an important mechanism for
preventing and responding to human rights violations
worldwide. Some are also concerned that the withholding
was not authorized by Congress. The United States has
continued to provide voluntary funding to the Office as
specified by Congress in annual appropriations bills ($14.5
million in FY2020).


OHCHR was created in 1993 by U.N. General Assembly
resolution 48/141 as an outcome of the U.N. World
Conference on Human Rights in Vienna that year. Support
for establishing such an office increased within the changed
political dynamics of the post-Cold War era and because of
a perceived need to ensure effective coordination of the
growing number of U.N. human rights-focused treaty
bodies and mechanisms.

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The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights is
appointed by the U.N. Secretary-General and approved by
the General Assembly. He or she serves up to two four-year
terms, although to date no commissioner has served for
more than one term. According to resolution 48/141, the
High Commissioner has principal responsibility for United
Nations human rights activities, and operates under the
direction of the Secretary-General.
While serving as a high-profile human rights advocate is
one aspect of the High Commissioner's role, the High
Commissioner also serves as an impartial evaluator of
human rights conditions, as a diplomat who must deliver
tough messages to governments while also working with
them to improve their practices, and as a manager tasked
with overseeing a substantively and geographically broad
U.N. organization. At times, High Commissioners have
criticized the United States, such as for conditions at the
U.S.-Mexico border and the detention of individuals at


Guantanamo Bay. The current High Commissioner is
Michelle Bachelet of Chile.


OHCHR works with governments and civil society
organizations to monitor human rights conditions and
provide expertise and technical assistance in support of
international human rights standards. Assistance may
include human rights assessments, advisory services,
trainings, and other activities. (For example, OHCHR
provided technical support to new Colombian institutions
charged with prosecuting human rights crimes under
international law committed during Colombia's period of
armed conflict.) OHCHR also works to mainstream
human rights promotion throughout the U.N. system,
including within relevant U.N. specialized agencies. (For
example, it seeks to ensure that human rights issues are
integrated within U.N. mechanisms and policies that
address terrorism and violent extremism.)
OHCHR is headquartered in Geneva and is bureaucratically
situated within the U.N. Secretariat, which is the U.N.
system's administrative body led by the Secretary-General.
It has an office in New York and a field-based presence that
includes 12 regional offices, 14 country offices, 13 human
rights components as part of U.N. peacekeeping missions,
27 human rights advisors integrated within U.N. country
teams, and a rapid response unit to respond to human rights
emergencies (e.g., this unit in 2017 deployed U.N.
personnel to monitor human rights violations against the
Rohingya in Burma).


A major part of OHCHR's work consists of supporting the
U.N. Human Rights Council. OHCHR and the Council are
distinct entities, yet their work is often connected. The
Council is an intergovernmental body composed of 47
member states. OHCHR, as part of the U.N. Secretariat,
helps support and coordinate the Council's work, including
that done by country or issue-focused human rights
monitoring experts that have been appointed by council
members (known as special procedures). OHCHR also
carries out any tasks or activities assigned by the Council
and makes relevant recommendations.

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OHCHR is funded through a combination of assessed and
voluntary contributions from governments and other
donors. Assessed contributions are provided through the
U.N. regular budget; they fund core human rights activities
and programs, including those mandated by the General
Assembly and Human Rights Council. Voluntary
contributions can vary from year to year and generally fund
specific projects earmarked by donors. In 2018,


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