16/7/2004
Fight against Terrorism Must Not Undermine Respect For Human Rights
The struggle against terrorism must be reconciled with the imperatives
of personal safety and dignity, the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights has asserted.
"Respect
for human rights and human security are inextricably linked," Louise
Arbour, the newly appointed UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights, told the Geneva-based Human Rights Committee,
which monitors compliance with the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
Ms
Arbour cited as evidence various hotspots now under international
scrutiny: "Afghanistan,
Darfur, Iraq: these examples show us that the prevention of,
and solution to, conflicts depends
on the implementation of fundamental human right standards".
The
High Commissioner hailed the Committee's determination that
the treaty is valid for
troops serving in other countries. "Your
pronouncements on the applicability of the Covenant to national
contingents of international peacekeeping operations, as well
as to multinational forces, and on the interdependence between
principles of humanitarian law and human rights law, are important
and timely," she
said.
Ms
Arbour, who served most recently on Canada's Supreme Court,
said her experience there corroborated
this finding. "We
concluded that the successful protection of citizens and the
successful protection of their rights are not only compatible
with each otherbut are, indeed, interdependent. There can be
no genuine personal security if rights are in peril, any more
than legal guarantees
can exist in an environment of fear and anarchy," she stressed.
The High Commissioner recalled
that since 2001, the expert panel has examined "how anti-terrorism
regulations may operate to undermine Covenant guarantees."
UN human rights bodies, she observed,
provide "a crucial
supplement to the work of the Security Council's Counter-Terrorism
Committee."