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UNITED NATIONS OUT
OF CONTROL
When the UN was established in 1945, with
awesome hope and overwhelming good will, no one predicted
it would become an agency that would probe and penetrate into
the private and domestic lives of individuals residing in
its member countries. This, however, is exactly what the UN
is attempting to do. It is trying to introduce value systems,
policies and practices that are alien to many, if not most,
countries and which are very harmful, especially to women
and girls and to their societies, in regard to abortion, homosexuality,
sexual education and prostitution.
In short, the officials operating the UN
are pushing for power to transform the world in accordance
with their own personal belief systems. They are attempting
to accomplish this by two methods:
1.Treaty Monitoring Committees
The UN human rights treaties include a provision
that ratifying states must submit an official report to the
UN officials who monitor the treaties every four or five years
(depending on the treaty) in order to indicate whether the
country has complied with the treaty provisions.
These treaty-monitoring committees are attempting
to change the world to fit their own anti-life/anti-family
ideologies by re-interpreting the treaties by way of reading
in provisions that are not written in the actual text.
For example, although the word abortion or access
to sexual education and contraceptives or homosexuality are
not a part of any treaty entered into within the UN system,
the monitoring committees have read in these provisions
and have repeatedly directed reporting states to implement
these new-found provisions in their domestic law.
Monitoring Committee for the Womens
Convention
One of the worst offenders is the monitoring
committee for the Convention for the Elimination of all Forms
of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). Although abortion
is not mentioned in the CEDAW document, that committee has
recommended that abortion be instituted in 37 different countries.
The committee especially directs its attention to Catholic
countries, such as Ireland, Malta, Poland, Peru, etc., criticizing
them for their failure to provide open access to abortion.
This criticism, although not legally binding
on countries, has been effective, unfortunately, in inducing
some countries to change their abortion law. This occurred
most recently in the Catholic country of Colombia, where its
laws prohibited all abortions. A U.S. based feminist group,
The Center for Reproductive Rights, located in New York, with
tentacles worldwide, commenced a constitutional legal challenge
of the abortion law in Colombia. The Attorney General of Colombia
was extremely deferential to the criticisms by the CEDAW monitoring
committee in his brief to the court, quoting from the committee
that it noted with concern the existence of legislation
criminalizing all abortions which would lead women to undergo
high risk abortions. The Attorney General also quoted
from the monitoring committee when it stated that criminalizing
abortion constitutes a violation of a womens right
to equality since it violates a womans rights to health
and life. In its judgement, handed down on May 10, 2006,
the Constitutional Court of Colombia quoted from the Attorney
Generals deferential assessment of the monitoring committees
recommendations, and even though they were merely ideological,
and not based on the text of the treaty, relied on them in
reaching its conclusions.
The result of this was that the Colombian
court legalized abortion in cases of forced pregnancy, fetal
malformation and endangerment of the life of the mother
a remarkable amendment to the abortion law, which will undoubtedly
be widened further over the next few years.
Further examples of absurd recommendations
of the CEDAW monitoring committee include directing China
to legalize prostitution; directing Kyrgystan to legalize
lesbianism; directing Belarus to cancel Mothers Day
because it perpetuates a negative cultural stereotype.
It also criticized Ireland for allowing the Catholic Church
too great a voice in public policy!
The monitoring committee for CEDAWs
sister treaty, the Convention on the Rights of
the Child, has also had a field day re-interpreting its provisions
and running amok over parental rights by extending new rights
to minor children. For example, Canada has been criticized
a number of times by this committee for its failure to ban
the spanking of children. This, despite the fact that the
Supreme Court of Canada has upheld the rights of parents to
spank their children if it is reasonable under the circumstances
as set out in S. 43 of the Criminal Code. Also, all polls
clearly indicate by a wide margin that Canadians believe parents
should have this reasonable right to discipline their children.
Who are these so-called experts, frequently drawn
from such bastions of human rights as Cuba, Saudi Arabia and
China, to tell us what are acceptable practices for raising
our children?
How the Monitoring Committees Acquired Influence
The influence of these treaty monitoring
committees arose from a secret arrangement, made in December
1996, at Deep Cove, New York, between the heads of UN agencies
and feminist NGOs at the UN. At this meeting, it was decided
that monitoring committees would re-interpret
all UN treaties so as to read into them feminist, anti-family
provisions that were never written into these treaties in
the first place. The document created at this meeting is called,
Round Table of Human Rights Treaty Bodies on Human Rights
Approaches to Womens Health, with a Focus on Sexual
and Reproductive Health and Rights. At this meeting,
the committees were also instructed to send out special
rapporteurs (reporters) to cross the borders into countries
which had ratified the treaties in order to investigate, personally,
whether compliance with the committees interpretation
of the treaties was actually taking place.
This charade is due to the fact that most
UN treaties came into existence and were ratified years ago,
well before the western powers feminist, anti-life agenda
had coalesced at the UN. As a result, the treaties do not
include feminist provisions so the committees are now re-interpreting
the treaties to incorporate such objectives.
In September 2006, Dr. Kristina Morvai of
Hungary, who has been a member of the CEDAW monitoring committee
since 2002, spoke out publicly against the questionable tactics
used by the CEDAW monitoring committee. She pointed out that
the State Parties to CEDAW never gave authority to the committee
to declare or create rights through its own interpretations
of the treaty. She also confirmed that the committee is legislating
in fields that are not covered by the Convention and that
there are large inconsistencies, incoherency and unpredictability
in the treaty monitoring committees positions. Dr. Morvais
outspoken objections to the activities of the monitoring committee
led to her removal from the committee.
The treaty monitoring committees, whose recommendations
are non-binding and advisory only, have become so discredited
that Australia, in September 2000, decided that it would no
longer report to UN committees because they consistently overstep
their mandates. Canada should follow Australias example.
The Effect of UN Recommendations and Reports
Although the recommendations by the UN treaty
monitoring committees and the rapporteurs are not binding
or enforceable in law, they nonetheless serve as a useful
tool for feminist NGOs to pressure and embarrass governments
into implementing their recommendations. In Canada, in the
December and January hearings (see Reality March/April, 2007)
the criticism by the treaty monitoring committee was used
time and time again in the testimony before the Status of
Women Standing Committee as indication that the Conservative
government was anti-women and was denying Canadian
women their equality rights by its cut back to that
agencys funding.
The Canadian Courts and UN Treaties
A further concern is that the Supreme Court
of Canada has recently begun to look to UN treaties for direction
in interpreting human rights in Canada, even though such legislation
has not been passed under Canadian law.
That is, in order for international treaties
to be enforced in Canada, they must first be enacted into
domestic legislation. However, feminist Supreme Court Judge,
Madame Justice Claire LHeureux Dubé, in the 1999
case, Law vs. Minister of Immigration, got around this lack
of domestic enactment by simply proclaiming that the
values and principles reflected in international human right
laws assist in interpreting [Canadian] statutes
.
Again, in the 2004 Supreme Court of Canada
decision in Canadian Foundation for Children v. Attorney General
of Canada (the spanking case), in which REAL Women intervened,
the applicant (the Foundation which opposed spanking) used
the UN treaties and the interpretation of them
by the monitoring committee as an indication that spanking
children was unreasonable and supposedly counter
to international law. Fortunately, however, in that case,
the Supreme Court of Canada chose to ignore the treaty monitoring
committees interpretation and looked instead to the
actual wording of the treaty itself and found that it did
not explicitly ban the spanking of children. Next time we
might not be so lucky.
2.UN Rapporteur (Reporters)
The United Nations has another method to
try to change the values of its member nations. It has now
developed the practice of retaining rapporteurs (reporters)
who are supposed to be experts, selected to provide recommendations
to various UN agencies and committees. An example of this
was the appointment of an American so-called expert, Paul
Hunt, to the Geneva based UN Human Rights Commission. In 2004,
Mr. Hunt submitted a report that stated that sexual and reproductive
health was an integral element of mental and physical health,
and, therefore, nations had an obligation to provide abortion.
He further stated, Women with unwanted pregnancies should
be offered reliable information and compassionate counselling,
including information on where and when a pregnancy may be
terminated legally. Mr. Hunt also stated, As has
been noted, discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation
is impermissible under international human rights law.
These comments infuriated the delegates at
the conference because they were deliberate misstatements.
Fortunately, because of the diligent work of the pro-family
NGOs and delegations, including REAL Womens representative
there, Ginger Malacko , some of the more harmful statements
in Mr. Hunts report were watered down.
Nonetheless, a draft resolution was proposed
by Brazil to welcome Hunts Report. After
extensive lobbying, this resolution was downgraded to state
that Mr. Hunts report would be taken note of.
This greatly downgraded Mr. Hunts egregious report.
A more recent example of an unacceptable
United Nations report is the 148-page report released in January
2007 by the Executive Director of UNICEF, Anne Veneman, who
reported on The State of the Worlds Children 2007.
In fact, her report focused instead on the supposed discrimination
and disempowerment of women. One sidebar sets out the deleterious
consequences of gender discrimination across the life
cycle. Gender inequality, according to the report, is precarious.
The report did manage finally to tie in children by stating
that the achievement of gender equality makes the world
fit for children.
In its reference to violent homes, the UNICEF
Report indicated only that the perpetrators of violence could
be parents or other close family members. The
careful wording about violent homes and domestic
settings totally ignored the problems that result from
family breakdown and skates over the fact that fathers are
not the primary abusers of their children. Of course, in this
politically correct, gobbledygook document, childrens
vulnerability necessitates the primary responsibility
of the state to uphold childrens rights
to protection and access to services.
This UNICEF report is, in reality, all about
a left wing womens agenda, albeit, papered
over with slogans such as a world fit for women is a
world fit for children.
Another example of UN tampering is the report
issued by the Secretary Generals appointed expert,
Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, presented to the UNs General
Assembly on October 11 and 12, 2006. This report is entitled
Report on Violence Against Children and drew on
a previous United Nations report, Global Summary of
the Legal Status of Corporal Punishment of Children.
Mr. Pinheiros report recommended the prohibition of
all forms of violence, including corporal punishment against
children. It also recommended that the public, including
children should be educated on childrens rights, and
that children should participate in the development of national
strategies, including making child-friendly reporting
mechanisms. A brave new world it will be if his recommendations
are ever implemented.
Conclusion
Canadians should follow the example set by
Australia and cease to make their reports to treaty monitoring
committees until such time as the committees stop making recommendations
on ideological grounds, contrary to the actual text of the
treaties.
The Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations
John McNee, a professional diplomat and former Canadian Ambassador
to Belgium, should be required to raise this matter of the
abuse by the treaty monitoring committees with the new United
Nations Secretary-General, Ban-Ki Moon.
Please write to Prime Minister Harper and
Minister of Foreign Affairs Peter McKay and your MP to bring
to their attention the manipulation by these treaty monitoring
committees led by feminist so-called experts.
Request that Canada no longer undergo the expense and time
consuming effort of submitting reports to them. We know that
Canadian feminist NGOs will be submitting their shadow
reports to the CEDAW committee at the same time Canada makes
its next official report in 2007, providing the committee
with ammunition to criticize the Conservative government for
its alleged anti-women policies. That is how these committees
operate: they rely on feminist NGOs from member States to
provide the information necessary to attack the governments
of their country for not implementing feminist ideology into
their domestic legislation. We do not need such nonsense.
Please write to:
The Right Honourable Stephen Harper
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A2
Fax: 613-941-6900
The Honourable Peter McKay
Minister of Foreign Affairs Canada
125 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0C2
Fax: 613996-9709
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