Effort to keep Syria off UNESCO committee gathers strength

A move to keep Syria off a UNESCO committee appears to be growing in strength: A group of UNESCO member states is trying to remove Syria from a committee with a human rights mandate, a panel it quietly rejoined despite its deadly crackdown on protesters. U.N. Watch, a Geneva-based NGO, diplomats and others said Wednesday ...

By , a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies.

A move to keep Syria off a UNESCO committee appears to be growing in strength:

A move to keep Syria off a UNESCO committee appears to be growing in strength:

A group of UNESCO member states is trying to remove Syria from a committee with a human rights mandate, a panel it quietly rejoined despite its deadly crackdown on protesters.

U.N. Watch, a Geneva-based NGO, diplomats and others said Wednesday that a growing group of countries — western and Arab — want to unseat Syria from the Committee on Conventions and Recommendations. The committee deals with multiple issues, but has a strong human rights component.

Syria was named to the committee in November by the Arab group at UNESCO. Now, a number of countries, from the United States and Britain to Qatar and Kuwait, are mounting a campaign to remove Syria from the committee by putting the issue on the agenda of the next executive board. The board meets from Feb. 27 until March 10.

The U.S. ambassador to UNESCO, David Killion, said he “strongly objects” to the reappointment in November of Syria on the committee.

Syria was appointed to the somewhat obscure committee by the Arab group of states late last year, apparently as a function of a routine regional rotation system. It was just this kind of value-neutral rotation scheme that U.S. ambassador Joseph Torsella blasted last week in a major speech on UN reform. 

David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist

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