The United Nations, again

I shouldn't have to blog this much on the United Nations. But unfortunately, their complete refusal to do most things correctly either legally or morally leaves those of us who question the UN's value no choice. For the latest example of this, let's look at Freedom House's latest report on free nations:
The report, "The Worst of the Worst: The World's Most Repressive Societies 2005," includes detailed summations of the dire human rights situations in Belarus, Burma (Myanmar), China, Cuba, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Laos, Libya, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe. Chechnya, Tibet, and Western Sahara are included as territories under Russian, Chinese, and Moroccan jurisdictions respectively.

The report is available online.

Significantly, six of the eighteen most repressive governments--those of China, Cuba, Eritrea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and Zimbabwe--are members of the Commission on Human Rights (CHR), representing nearly 11 percent of the 53-member body.

"Repressive governments enjoying CHR membership work in concert and have successfully subverted the Commission's mandate," said Freedom House Executive Director Jennifer Windsor. "Rather than serving as the proper international forum for identifying and publicly censuring the world's most egregious human rights violators, the CHR instead protects abusers, enabling them to sit in judgment of democratic states that honor and respect the rule of law," she said.
I hope you didn't honestly expect anything different - well, other than the fact that 6 divided by 53 gives you a little more than, not nearly, 11%. But before we go any further, let's take a look at what statutes or benchmarks Freedom House rates the countries against:
Individual countries are evaluated based on a checklist of questions on political rights and civil liberties that are derived in large measure from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
And what does the UNCHR go by?
The mission of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) is to protect and promote all human rights for all.

OHCHR is guided in its work by the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequent human rights instruments, and the 1993 Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action. The promotion of universal ratification and implementation of human rights treaties is at the forefront of OHCHR activities.
Well, well, well. The same declaration of human rights that the CHR swears by is the same declaration used by Freedom House to ascertain that 6 of the CHR's members are the worst abusers of freedom and human rights of all. But let's look at it from a strictly mathematical perspective:
             Free    Partly Free    Not Free    Worst 18*
UN's CHR: 22 (42%) 17 (32%) 14 (26%) 6 (11%)
World: 89 (46%) 54 (28%) 49 (26%) 18 (9%)
*a special bonus from The House Of Wheels and A Western Heart.
It doesn't take a degree in statistics to come up with the following statement: The world as a whole deals better with human rights than the countries the UN gets to enforce human rights. And that'd be hilarious, if it wasn't so sad.

(Cross-posted to The House Of Wheels.)

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