Small Win for NGOs as UN Members Try to Exclude Critical Voices

  • by Aruna Dutt (united nations)
  • Inter Press Service

On Monday 25 July, a larger meeting of the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) voted to give ECOSOC consultative status to The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) a United States based NGO, after its application was rejected by the smaller ECOSOC committee for the fourth time.

The only reason CPJ was finally accepted was because a vote by the Economic and Social Council was forced by supportive member states, overriding the previous denial from the NGO committee, Courtney Radsch, CPJ's Advocacy Director told IPS.

Press freedom is essential pillar of the UN human rights system guaranteed through Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (freedom of opinion and expression) and a part of customary international law which means that every UN member is duty bound to enable the exercise of this right.

"The UN plays an important role in shaping norms and setting agendas so it is an important the UN put journalist safety and press freedom at the heart of its work, from human rights to sustainable development and everything in between," Radsch told IPS.

But in reality far many UN member states continue to undermine press freedom through restrictive laws, by jailing and killing journalists or not properly investigating attacks on journalists and bringing perpetrators to justice.

U.S. Ambassador to  the UN, Samantha Power told ECOSOC on 25 July that during the four years that CPJ was denied accreditation 863 journalists have been imprisoned, 19 have gone missing, and 304 have been killed, quoting CPJ figures.

"The UN NGO committee seems less interested at ensuring the voices of civil society are present to contribute to matters of great concern, and rather at excluding these voices because of the uncomfortable truths they espouse about member states." Radsch told IPS.

"Being granted consultative status is a highly politicized process that is aimed less at ensuring that our CPJ meets the criteria for membership, such as supporting the world of the UN and working on relevant matters, not to mention our recognized standing in the field," said Radsch.

Mandeep Tiwana, Head of Policy and Research at CIVICUS, told IPS that the Committee to Protect Journalists' long and bruising struggle to gain ECOSOC status shows how the UN is not taking press freedom seriously, and that the UN NGO Committee is excluding NGOs simply because they are critical of governments.

"The very fact that the UN NGO Committee is comprised of representatives of 19 UN member states based on geographical representation makes it exclusionary," Tiwana told IPS.

"The current model of global governance is heavily state-centric prioritizing state representation over people's participation or adequate civil society participation," said Tiwana. "It's a global scandal that even today, we have states in the 21st century whose governments are not democratically elected but claim to represent their populations on the global stage."

The current membership of the NGO Committee, says Tiwana, is made up of several countries with weak democratic institutions and  leaders who have been in power for decades in addition to not being elected through free and fair processes which makes the very constitution of the NGO Committee exclusionary.

This is why the work of the NGO Committee over the past few years has been impeded by bureaucratic wrangling and political posturing by these states who have deliberately sought to undermine the role of civil society organisations in shining a spotlight on rights violations, says Tiwana.

"The Obama administration has expended significant diplomatic energy in advocating for the intrinsic value of an empowered and enabled civil society in the UN as well as in other multilateral forums such as the Community of Democracies."

"US support for CPJ's legitimate quest to achieve ECOSOC status is thus a significant outcome within a raft of several efforts such as the creation of a UN special rapporteur on freedom of assembly and association, the passing of several groundbreaking resolutions on civil society rights at the UN Human Rights Council and the inclusion of targets within the Sustainable Development Goals framework to support fundamental freedoms and civil society partnerships."

But, Tiwana says, "It's ironic that that the NGO Committee has no NGO participation and comprises several governments that are actively persecuting NGOs."

Editor's note: IPS is an NGO which has consultative statues with ECOSOC.

© Inter Press Service (2016) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

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