Top UN expert’s resignation spells trouble
for defenders of LGBT rights
September 13, 2017 2.08pm SAST
Author
Rosa
Freedman
Vitit Muntarbhorn, the UN’s first Independent
Expert on protection against violence and discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity, has resigned after a just year in his post,
citing ill health and caring responsibilities. Before stepping down, he will
deliver his second and final report. This is just the latest development in a
long-running UN battle over LGBT rights – and it could herald a new attempt to
undermine international efforts to protect and promote the fundamental human
rights of LGBT individuals.
All people hold certain fundamental rights by
virtue of being born human. These include not being tortured, arbitrarily
detained, or discriminated against based on “protected characteristics” such as
race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation and gender identity. That last
category might be obvious to many of us, but it is not accepted by the more
than 70 states that criminalise and discriminate against LGBT people or acts,
and those countries have constantly fought against any attempt to discuss,
report on, or create specific international mechanisms to protect those
individuals from having their fundamental rights violated.
The main battleground in this fight is the
UN’s main human rights body, the Human Rights Council. In 2011, the Council
held its first discussions on protecting LGBT people from human rights abuses –
and all the Islamic countries at the Council, other than Algeria, walked out of
the council chamber during the panel discussion.
In the years that followed, those countries
opposing the notion that LGBT people require specific protection of their fundamental
rights tried to provide cover for abusing their rights by advancing notions of
“traditional values” and “rights of the family”. But despite their best efforts
to block the path, in June 2016 the Human Rights Council created Muntarbhorn’s
post, a mechanism set up specifically to report on two violations of
fundamental rights of sexual orientation and gender identity minorities:
violence and discrimination.
This process amounted to one of the most
polarised discussions and votes in the Council’s decade-long history.
Step forward, step back
In the vote on setting up the Independent
Expert role, all European Union and Latin American members of the council voted
in favour; all African countries voted against or abstained, and all Islamic
countries other than Albania voted against. So did China and Russia. The
countries voting no then tried to overturn the council’s resolution at the UN
General Assembly. They ultimately failed, but only after significant diplomatic
efforts and civil society campaigns.
When it finally came, Muntarbhorn’s
appointment was heralded as a great victory in an ongoing struggle. An
Independent Expert can request to visit any country in the world to
investigate, report on, and make recommendations about human rights related to
their mandates. They may also receive communications from victims of human
rights abuses, civil society, or others, and may transmit complaints to the
relevant state or government. They also produce reports that go into issues in
depth, often providing innovative analysis and new approaches to protecting and
promoting rights within their mandate.
Wrangling underway at the UN Human Rights
Council. EPA/Laurent Gillieron
Muntarbhorn’s first report clearly signalled
his plans for his tenure. He set out in detail the mandate, the methodology for
protecting people from violence and discrimination, and his initial priorities:
the decriminalisation of consensual same-sex relations, effective
anti-discrimination measures, legal recognition of gender identity,
destigmatisation, sociocultural inclusion, and the promotion of education and
empathy. His second report focuses on the first two areas – but sadly, with his
resignation, he will not be able to take that work forward.
And so now the UN is left with the job of
appointing his successor. It’s very unusual for a mandate-holder to step down
so quickly, and other Special Procedures mandate-holders have in the past been
subjected to attacks, threats of violence, and intimidation.
It’s certainly possible that Muntarbhorn’s
short tenure was made difficult behind the scenes by states or private actors
who opposed the creation of his job from the off. Just the possibility of such
pressure might be enough to deter other human rights experts from stepping up
to take on the mandate. So long as the mandate is vacant those states who’d
still like to stop it being taken forward at all will have a chance to disrupt
the appointment process and the work of the eventual appointee.
Given what has come before, those interested
in protecting LGBT people from violence and discrimination should roll up their
sleeves and prepare for another round in this fight.
Response:
Looking at the
details and specifics of this issue, it appears that the targeted audience is
readers that are of voting age, and engaged of the affairs of the world, who
are from the UK and US. The author is showing the audience that the Islamic states
are refusing to have a discussion on the subject of human rights, wanting the
audience to become frustrated with the Islamic states. I believe the author’s
bias is leaning against the Islamic states who are not wanting to have
discussions about gender identity. My bias would lean towards the Islamic states,
there is no point in reasoning with them, due to their stick rules influenced by
the Islamic faith. Everyone already knows that it is not possible to change
these rules in the Islamic states, since they are under Islam, they will not
change their viewpoints.https://theconversation.com/top-un-experts-resignation-spells-trouble-for-defenders-of-lgbt-rights-83989
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