Published on 12:00 AM, May 18, 2019

UN BUDGET SHORTFALL

Human rights oversight in peril: experts

Countries’ failure to pay their UN dues on time is threatening the work of expert committees tasked with monitoring adherence to a range of international human rights treaties, the committees warned yesterday.

The “UN budget shortfalls seriously undermine the work of the Human Rights Treaty bodies,” said the 10 independent expert committees that monitor and review how countries implement international treaties on things like preventing torture, racial and gender discrimination.

Jens Modvig, who chairs the Committee Against Torture, told reporters in Geneva that several countries had created an “acute cashflow crisis” by delaying the payment of their UN dues.

The “unprecedented consequence”, he said, was that the committee chairpersons had received a letter from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on April 30 flagging the lack of funds and warning that six of them might need to cancel their last session this year.

“This was considered very concerning,” Modvig said.

“It is unprecedented that a legally binding system like the treaty bodies, based on conventions, signed and ratified by member states, are unable to do their work in protecting human rights and monitoring state parties to the conventions,” he said.

He warned that if the six affected committees are indeed forced to scale back their work it would have dire consequences.