It appears that there is at least one real diplomat in the Obama diplomatic corps. he is David Killion, who is Obama's ambassador to UNESCO. On Wednesday, Killion blasted the organization for
naming Syria's Assad regime to two of its 'human rights' committees.
David Killion, U.S. Ambassador to UNESCO, in response today to a question by UN Watch, said that >“the
Syrian regime’s actions are an affront to the dignity and human rights
of the Syrian people, and it is not fit to sit on this body.”
Ambassador Killion reaffirmed the U.S. government’s strong
objection to Syria’s participation in the UNESCO Committee on
Conventions and Recommendations stating, “It is indefensible for the
Syrian regime to be allowed to stand as a judge of other countries’
human rights records while it systematically violates the human rights
of its citizens, commits acts of sexual violence against women and
children, and murders its own people.”
UN Watch executive
director Hillel Neuer saluted the U.S. for speaking out, and urged
France, Germany, the UK, and the EU to similarly condemn Syria’s
“obscene” membership on the committee, and to take concrete action to
remove it. Neuer also called on UN chief Ban Ki-moon and UNESCO director
Irina Bokova “to use their moral voice to spur action.”
“Now that both the OIC and the Arab League have removed Assad’s
regime from their organizations, there is simply no longer any excuse —
morally or politically — for UNESCO to insist on keeping Assad’s regime
on a human rights committee that is charged with helping victims
worldwide. It’s time for UNESCO to stop legitimizing a government that
mercilessly murders its own people,” said Neuer.
Ambassador Killion also told UN Watch that “The Assad regime has
repeatedly acted to silence the voice of the Syrian people and to
repress independent media attempting to report on its misdeeds. The
regime’s brutality has sparked a humanitarian crisis, causing innocent
suffering and senseless tragedy. This is a regime willing to exact
collective punishment on innocent communities, import fighters from Iran
and Hizbollah to help carry out its evil deeds, and destroy the country
and its heritage for the sake of its own survival.”
After UNESCO elected Syria to its human rights committee in November
2011, UN Watch launched a campaign to reverse the decision, prompting
the US and Britain to initiate a March 2012 debate at UNESCO. However,
while a resolution was adopted censuring Syria’s violations — a welcome
first for UNESCO — the promised call to oust the regime from UNESCO’s
human rights panel was excised.
Isn't it a pity that no one spoke out until Syria was expelled from the OIC and the Arab League? Isn't it a pity that no one spoke out while there was still to make sure that the Syrian uprising would be secular and not Islamist? Too little, too late? Well, yeah, but better late than never.
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