
Mary Robinson - United Nations/Ireland

Mary Robinson
U.N. High Commissioner for Human
Rights
In These Times magazine, October
2002
When a meeting of diplomats, nongovernmental
organizations and writers convened in 1997 at U.N. headquarters
to consider how to commemorate the upcoming 50th anniversary of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, one option was rejected
unanimously. There would be no attempt to redraft or update the
document, because a new version would surely be weaker.
To the fundamentalists in the U.S. Congress
and other parts of the world, international human rights was like
something said by Humpty-Dumpty in Through the Looking Glass:
When he used a word, it meant exactly what he wanted it to mean,
no more and no less. When the Israelis killed Palestinians in
Hebron several years ago, for instance, the U.N. statement assigned
no blame, regretted the Palestinian deaths and hoped for peace.
But 1997 was also the year that Mary Robinson,
the former president of Ireland, took office as the U.N. high
commissioner for human rights-and when she used the phrase human
rights, it meant exactly what it should. Robinson's statement
on the Hebron killings condemned the Israelis and said they should
abide by the Geneva Convention. On her watch, human rights would
come to mean a lot more inside the U.N. bureaucracy than ever
before.
After the Berlin Wall fell, there had
been a brief period of consensus, culminating in the 1993 Vienna
World Conference on Human Rights, which called for the appointment
of the first U.N. high commissioner for human rights. The next
year, Jose Ayala Lasso, a highly unmemorable Latin American diplomat,
got the job. Perhaps the defining moment of his tenure was creation
of a "Human Rights Fax Hotline" to report human rights
violations. Then a persecuted peasant in Central Africa could
run bleeding through the bush to his nearest post office, where
government officials, in return for the equivalent of a month's
salary (if the phones were working), could obligingly send his
complaint fax to Geneva, where it would curl up on the floor with
thousands of others-to be ignored.
Things changed when Robinson accepted
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan's job offer: She brought a sense
of urgency to the position, along with the authority of a recently
retired head of state. This upset the type of U.N. bureaucrats
who would much rather file reports of massacres at the bottom
of a cabinet than upset governments of any hue. But for Robinson,
human rights transcended national affiliations. Just because China
was big, or Israel had friends in Washington, was no reason for
her to stay silent.
Robinson recalls "I got very wise
advice from a friend of mine when I started-'Mary, remember, if
you get too popular in that job, it means that you're not doing
a good job.' So I didn't actively seek to be unpopular, but I
knew that to do the job well ... you've got to be prepared to
criticize both developed and developing countries."
While her outspokenness won her many friends
at human rights organizations, governments were more uncomfortable.
She transformed her position into that of a real international
ombudsman, one who delivered withering judgments without fear
or favor. This certainly was not appreciated in Washington-and
the Bush administration actively opposed an extension of her term.
"Robinson paid a price for her willingness to stand up to
powerful governments that violate human rights," says Reed
Brody of Human Rights Watch. "She has set a standard of candor
and strength for future high commissioners, and we are sad to
lose her as an ally."
In the end, it was almost certainly her
criticism of the United States and Israel, in particular, that
cost her the job. "It's ironic in a way," Robinson told
In These Times, "because the issue I'm most committed to
is the integrity of the human rights agenda, and shaping it so
it's not politicized. I applied that faithfully to addressing
the problems both in the occupied Palestinian Territory and in
Israel."
She worries that in the United States,
people "don't see the suffering of the Palestinian people;
they don't see the impact of collective punishment. They do immediately
see and empathize-and rightly so-with the suffering of Israeli
civilians who are killed, or injured, or just frightened.... But
I find it very disheartening that there is not more understanding
here of the appalling suffering of the Palestinian population."
Robinson's days have been numbered since
last year's conference on racism in Durban, South Africa, when
the United States and Israel walked out to protest language in
the draft agreement aimed at Israeli activities in the Occupied
Territories. But the Bush administration seemed to hold her personally
responsible for the rest of the world staying to the end. "I
urged and begged the United States and Israel to stay," Robinson
says. "I told them that all the draft language, which was
unacceptable, would be taken out-and it was."
The Durban conference, though somewhat
chaotic, expanded definitions of racism and offered support to
many people who previously did not have much of a voice. "I
think we achieved an extraordinary breakthrough in Durban against
all the odds," Robinson says. "I was in Mexico for the
first of the follow-up regional conferences from Durban, and it
was a joy to see how much it means for countries in Central and
South America, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, the way it has brought new
hope for indigenous peoples, for people of African descent, for
black Brazilians."
September 11 gave the United States yet
another reason to ignore the results of international conventions
like Durban-and indeed to ignore its own Bill of Rights. Robinson
is very concerned about a deterioration of human rights since
the terrorist attacks. Citing the examples of immigration detainees
and Guantanamo Bay prisoners held by the United States, Robinson
complains, "Governments are using [the terrorist attacks]
to clamp down on human rights and freedom of expression. Human
rights defenders are branded as terrorists; the climate is harsh
for asylum seekers and refugees."
Despite this setback, she remains hopeful.
"I think that the international human rights norms and standards
have a contribution to make to a more ethical globalization. We
have the international norms and standards; we have the treaty
bodies working more effectively; we have the rapporteurs; there's
an ability to name and shame; it's accepted that human rights
don't stop at borders. If there are violations in a country, the
international community is rightly interested."
Robinson is particularly optimistic about
the development of 'an International Criminal Court. "I really
think the International Criminal Court is an extraordinary step
forward- a way of symbolizing that we are going to end impunity
for egregious human rights violations. It may take time, but now
there is going to be a permanent court, and you can be brought
before it if you haven't been before a national court."
But once again, the United States is standing
in the way. The Bush administration "unsigned" the treaty
creating the court, passed what opponents are calling the "Hague
Invasion Act" (authorizing the president to use military
force to rescue Americans held by the court), and has threatened
to veto every U.N. peacekeeping mission unless U.S. officials
are guaranteed immunity. "Now if other countries are under
pressure on human rights instruments they've signed," Robinson
worries, "they may say, 'Well, if the U.S. can unsign a treaty,
then so can we.' "
Looking back at her tenure, Robinson is
most proud of helping to change the developing world's attitude
toward human rights. "I was quite taken aback by how many
leaders of developing countries told me, 'Don't you know human
rights is just a Western stick to beat us with? It is politicized,
nothing to do with real concern about human rights.' "
Recognizing that there was "an element
of truth in that," she has defended the idea, unpopular with
the neoliberal consensus of the last decade, that economic and
social rights are integral to the protection of political rights,
invoking the "express vision and mandate of the establishment
of the High Commissioner's office, which was to seek consensus
on the right to development. That's an individual and a collective
right, the right of the people to gain the full flower of their
human rights."
She claims one consequence of her success
is that there is "more linkage being made by leaders of developing
countries between human rights and economic and social development.
They began to realize that if you got your human rights right,
you accelerated human development and economic development."
She says the crucial issue now is "national
capacity building"- building the infrastructure of efficient
governance, courts and non-governmental organizations, that is
needed to build societies based on rights in the developing world.
She plans to devote her time to that project, now that she is
quitting what she calls, with a smile, "the day job."
The day before leaving office, Robinson announced plans to head
a new project called the Ethical Globalization Initiative.
In July, Kofi Annan named Brazilian Sergio
Vieira de Mello as Robinson's successor-a choice she applauds.
Although a U.N. insider, de Mello is not necessarily the pushover
that the United States would like. Coming from a stint as head
of the U.N. mission in East Timor, he was also outspoken during
the Balkan wars. Perhaps it says a lot about how the world has
changed-with Mary Robinson's help-that a U.N. human rights commissioner
has to fear being undermined by Washington more than China or
a Third World tyrant.
Ian Williams is the author of The U.N.
for Beginners and a frequent commentator on foreign affairs.
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