Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

India Elected To UN Human Rights Council With Most Number Of Votes

IANS, 12 Oct, 2018 02:12 PM
    India was elected to the United Nations’ top human rights body on Friday for a period of three years beginning January 1, 2019, getting 188 votes in the Asia-Pacific category.
     
     
    The 193-member UN General Assembly held elections here for new members to the UN Human Rights Council. The 18 new members were elected by absolute majority through a secret ballot. Countries needed a minimum of 97 votes to get elected to the Council.
     
     
    India received 188 votes, the highest polled by any of the 18 countries elected in the voting.
     
     
    This is the fifth time India is elected to the Geneva-based Council, the main body of the UN charged with promoting and monitoring human rights.
     
     
    India’s presence on the Council will be important because the previous UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad Al Hussein asked the body to facilitate an international commission of inquiry into allegations of human rights violation in Kashmir.
     
     
    His successor Michelle Bachelet and Secretary-General Antonio Guterres have backed Zeid’s recommendation, which Pakistan—a member of the Council—is campaigning for.
     
     
    So far, no other country has backed Zeid’s call for the investigation.
     
     
    Bangladesh, which is at the frontlines of dealing with the Rohingya crisis, was also elected with 178 votes to the Council to fill one of the five vacancies for three year terms from the Asia-Pacific region.
     
     
    The regional group endorsed five countries, which matched the number of seats open for election this year, and they were the only countries on the ballot. The other regional candidates were Bahrain, Fiji and the Philippines.
     
     
    Thirteen other countries representing the other four regions were also elected to the Council.
     
     
    In January India will join China and Nepal, besides Pakistan, which were elected to the 47-member Council in previous years to serve three-year terms.
     
     
    When it nominated itself for the Council, India showcased its position as “the world’s largest democracy (and) India’s secular polity.” It pledged that it will continue to support international efforts to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
     
     
    In the nomination pledge, India also presented a broader approach to human rights, emphasising climate justice, health and poverty alleviation.
     
     
    India was among the first batch of 47 countries elected to the Council in 2006 soon after it was set up and received an initial one-year term instead of three to facilitate a rotating roster of vacancies each year.
     
     
    It was again elected in 2007, 2011 and 2014 to three-year-terms.
     
     
    Countries can be elected for only two consecutive terms and India took a year’s break when its term ended in 2017.
     
     
    Elections were held by secret ballot in the 193-member General Assembly on Friday, although the number of candidates for all the five regions matched the vacancies making it a formality.
     
     
    On the 47-member Council the seats are allocated based on “equitable regional distribution” giving the Asia-Pacific region a total of 13 seats, with some coming up for election every year.
     
     
    The African region also has 13 seats, while East European region has six, West European and others seven, and Latin American and Caribbean eight.
     
     
    The United States withdrew from the Council earlier this year after its Permanent Representative Nikki Haley questioned its legitimacy because of the presence of several dictatorial regimes violating human rights on it.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistani Man Arrested For Burning Christian Woman To Death Over Refusing His Marriage Proposal

    Pakistani Man Arrested For Burning Christian Woman To Death Over Refusing His Marriage Proposal
    A young Christian woman who was set on fire a week ago by a Muslim man for refusing to marry him today succumbed to her injuries at Lahore's Mayo Hospital in Pakistan's Punjab province.

    Pakistani Man Arrested For Burning Christian Woman To Death Over Refusing His Marriage Proposal

    9-Year-Old Chess Prodigy From India Caught In Battle To Stay In UK

    9-Year-Old Chess Prodigy From India Caught In Battle To Stay In UK
    Shreyas Royal has won a series on chess championships and his parents, Jitendra and Anju Singh, are now appealing to the UK Home Office for indefinite leave to remain (ILR) in Britain.

    9-Year-Old Chess Prodigy From India Caught In Battle To Stay In UK

    WATCH: Indian-American Teen Dhruv Gaur Wins $100,000 In Jeopardy College Quiz Contest

    WATCH: Indian-American Teen Dhruv Gaur Wins $100,000 In Jeopardy College Quiz Contest
    Indian-American teenager, Dhruv Gaur, has won the $100,000 Jeopardy college quiz championship.

    WATCH: Indian-American Teen Dhruv Gaur Wins $100,000 In Jeopardy College Quiz Contest

    Is Wearing A Turban Integral To Sikh Religion, Asks Supreme Court

    Is Wearing A Turban Integral To Sikh Religion, Asks Supreme Court
    The Supreme Court was hearing a plea by Jagdeep Singh Puri, who had challenged a local cycling association’s rules that required him to wear a helmet to participate in a competition.

    Is Wearing A Turban Integral To Sikh Religion, Asks Supreme Court

    Singapore PM Lee Leads 40,000 Devotees In Hindu Temple Reconsecration Ceremony

    Singapore PM Lee Leads 40,000 Devotees In Hindu Temple Reconsecration Ceremony
    For the first time since assuming office in 2004, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong led some 40,000 devotees and four ministers at a 164-year-old Hindu temple's reconsecration ceremony here, following the completion of its SGD 4.5 million restoration work.

    Singapore PM Lee Leads 40,000 Devotees In Hindu Temple Reconsecration Ceremony

    British MP, Indian Community Groups Demand Action Over Indian Flag Desecration In UK

    British MP, Indian Community Groups Demand Action Over Indian Flag Desecration In UK
    The British government is under growing pressure to take action against protesters behind the desecration of the Indian flag at Parliament Square in London during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's UK visit last week.

    British MP, Indian Community Groups Demand Action Over Indian Flag Desecration In UK