South African tapped for top U.N. human rights post

Source: Los Angeles Times | by Maggie Farley

The secretary-general will name South African Judge Navanethem Pillay as the next U.N. human rights commissioner as early as today, diplomats and U.N. officials said Thursday.

The daughter of a Tamil bus driver in Durban, she experienced human rights violations firsthand. Pillay earned a law degree at Harvard, but for 28 years during apartheid, she was not allowed to set foot in a judge’s chambers as a lawyer because of her South Asian origins. In 1995 she became the first woman of color to become a judge on the High Court.

Pillay, born in 1941, also served as a judge on the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda prosecuting crimes related to that nation’s genocide. She presided over landmark cases in international law that established rape as a war crime, convicted a former head of state for atrocities committed during his rule and prosecuted media for inciting genocide. She has served for five years on the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

Pillay may not be as outspoken as the current commissioner, Canadian Judge Louise Arbour, who often shamed governments and leaders that Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon would not criticize by name.

Arbour took the forefront on issues such as the United Nations’ opposition to capital punishment when Ban said he supported each state’s right to decide whether to use it, and has criticized the United States for skirting international law in its fight against terrorism.

Human Rights advocates wonder whether Pillay will stand up to big powers when they violate human rights, or push her native South Africa on controversial issues, such as human rights violations in neighboring Zimbabwe and elections there that the U.N. has declared illegitimate.

“The challenge for her will be to use the bully pulpit and be a strong advocate for human rights,” said Kenneth Roth, the executive director of Human Rights Watch. “As a judge, she has no experience with that.”

To read the article in its entirety, please click here.

0 Responses to “South African tapped for top U.N. human rights post”



  1. No Comments Yet

Leave a Reply

You must login to post a comment.




The Gstaad Project

The Gstaad Project is an open, online-based community aimed at bridging the gap between "we the people" of the world and the world's international organizations and intergovernmental entities. Founded in January 2007, the Gstaad Project is an apolitical and non-religious organization. It promotes social, economic, and cultural diversity with an emphasis on human rights, gender equality and development.

Use the string below to search posts in the Gstaad Project blog:

Documentaries and Projects

Why is Kofi Annan not a woman?
An independent documentary on gender and leadership at the United Nations and the odds of having a woman selected as Secretary-General

Why is Kofi Annan not a woman

United Nations for kids
A cartoon documentary series on the United Nations and its work around the world

United Nations for kids

United Nations Politics
A Newsvine group open to both supporters and critics of the work of the United Nations around the world

United Nations Politics

a

Calendar

July 2008
M T W T F S S
« Jun   Aug »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Feeds and Directories

The Gstaad Blog Feed

UN Feed

British Blog Directory

Newsvine

Add to Technorati Favorites