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The top UN rights body passed two resolutions last week that limit
freedom of expression rather than protect it, say IFEX members, even
further undermining its mandate.
Despite
objections from 40 rights organisations from around the world led by
ARTICLE 19 and the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS),
the UN Human Rights Council passed a resolution on 28 March that turns
the Special Rapporteur on free expression into a "prosecutor".
The resolution requires the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of
Expression to report on abuses of the right to freedom of expression
when they constitute an act of racial or religious discrimination. The
resolution, proposed by the Organisation of the Islamic Conference
(OIC), was passed by 32 council members with 15 abstentions.
Critics say the amendment will help to justify censorship and the
stifling of dissent. "The change to the mandate of the Special
Rapporteur on free expression is dramatic. It turns someone who is
supposed to defend freedom of opinion into a prosecutor whose job is to
go after those who abuse this freedom," says Reporters Without Borders
(RSF), one of the 40 organisations who appealed to the council not to
amend the rapporteur's mandate.
The protesting rights groups, including 21 organisations from
Islamic states, say the amendment changes the focus from protecting
freedom of expression to limiting it, and goes against the spirit of
the mandate. The groups also warn the vaguely worded amendment may lead
to "misleading interpretations".
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