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43 Alternative L.J. 3 (2018)

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Opinion


Australia at the


Human Rights Council


           Alternative Low journal
             2018, Vol. 43(1) 3
          @ The Author(s) 2018
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  DOI: 10. 1177/1037969X 17752007
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                *SAGE


Phil Lynch


2018 is a major year for international human rights, marking
the 70th  anniversary of the Universal Declaration on
Human   Rights. For Australia, 2018 will be significant too,
as the country takes its first ever seat at the United Nations
Human   Rights Council for a three-year term.
   Australia's ascent to the Council comes at a critical
time; a time at which the work of human rights defenders
globally has perhaps never  been more   important nor
more  imperilled. As civil society space closes at the
national level, and defenders are criminalised, imprisoned
and even  killed - from China to Egypt, from Russia to
Venezuela, and from  Burundi to the Philippines - more
and more  defenders are seeking to use the international
system to expose violations, to push for accountability, to
obtain justice and protection, and as a lever for change.
   International civil society has high expectations of
Australia as a Council member. We are a country with an
overall strong record in building the UN human   rights
system  and a rules-based international order, notwith-
standing obvious gross departures when it comes to the
treatment of refugees and asylum seekers and of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander persons and communities.
   Looking back at the end of Australia's term in 2021,
these expectations will likely be met if Australia's time on
the Council is characterised by three key elements.
   First, Australia should consult closely with civil society -
both at the national and international levels - in developing
its policies and positions at the Council. Independent civil
society can provide vital information and advice about the
human  rights situation on the ground and how  best to
address  human  rights challenges and violations. With
human  rights defenders around the world facing what the
UN  Special Rapporteur has described as 'unprecedented
attack', Australia should also prioritise protecting defen-
ders and promoting  a safe and enabling environment for
their work at the national, regional and international levels.
   Second, in seeking election to the Council, Australia
pledged to focus  on upholding freedom  of expression,
strengthening governance  and  democratic  institutions,
advancing  women's   rights, and protecting indigenous
rights, among other things. Australia should operationalise
this pledge by  leading and supporting country-specific


initiatives at the Council where these values and groups
are under attack. This means leading or supporting state-
ments or resolutions where freedom of expression is crim-
inalised, such as in Burundi or Bahrain, where democracy
and the rule of law are systematically subverted, such as in
China or Venezuela, where women human  rights defenders
are attacked and abused, such as in Egypt or Saudi Arabia,
or where  peoples are driven from their lands, such as in
Myanmar   or Honduras.  Like-minded States have shown
what  is possible through principled leadership. At the
Council's 35th session in June 2017, Iceland led a joint state-
ment on extrajudicial killings in the Philippines, while at the
Council's 36th session in September   the Netherlands
spearheaded  a resolution to  establish an international
investigation into war crimes in Yemen. Australia, by con-
trast, has a mixed-record at best when it comes to address-
ing country situations - soft pedalling on accountability for
gross human rights violations in countries such as Sri Lanka
and Cambodia  where Australia's refugee and asylum seeker
policy had a craven distorting effect on foreign policy. Civil
society organisations have diminishing patience for States
that espouse a rhetorical commitment to thematic human
rights issues - such as the protection of defenders, freedom
of expression or peaceful assembly - but that fail to take up
those issues in concrete situations where perceived polit-
ical, economic or other interests may be at stake.
   Finally, Australia's term will be deemed a success if it
uses the opportunity of Council membership to critically
assess and improve its own human rights record, and takes
seriously its obligations as a Council member to 'uphold the
highest standards' and cooperate fully with the Council and
other UN  human  rights mechanisms. It is in the national
interest that Council membership is used as a catalyst and
circuit breaker to address the profound socio-economic
disadvantage and political disenfranchisement of indigenous
peoples and to devise a refugee and asylum seeker policy
that is decent, humane and complies with international law.

Phil  Lynch   is Director of the  International Service
for Human  Rights (www.ishr.ch). Follow him on Twitter
@PhilALynch.


Corresponding author:
Phil Lynch, International Service for Human Rights, PO Box 16, CH-
Email: p.lynch@ishr.ch


1211 Geneva 20 CIC, Switzerland.

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