[WSIS CS-Plenary] a view on the denial of accreditation of Rapporteurs Sans Frontieres
Wolfgang Kleinwächter
wolfgang at imv.au.dk
Thu Sep 18 12:09:43 BST 2003
well done Rik
w
On torsdag, sep 18, 2003, at 12:21 Europe/Copenhagen, Rik Panganiban
wrote:
> Dear Friends,
>
> Speaking in my personal capacity, I would like to express a view on
> the denial of accreditation to the WSIS of the media-rights group
> Rapporteurs Sans Frontieres (Reporters Without Borders). For those
> who do not know, during the high-level segment of the last session of
> the Commission on Human Rights, held in March 2003, RSF disrupted one
> of the meetings by throwing flyers into the assembly hall, denouncing
> the election as chair of the CHR a representative of the government of
> Libya. This was a planned act of civil disobedience, which resulted in
> their expulsion from the hall of those RSF representatives, and
> subsequently the suspension of their accreditation to ECOSOC for one
> year.
>
> My understanding is that if an organization with ECOSOC consultative
> status has their accreditation suspended or revoked, they are not
> allowed to participate in other UN-sponsored fora. Thus, on a
> legalistic level, the WSIS secretariat was within their rights to not
> allow this organization's representatives to be accredited to
> participate in the WSIS.
>
> Civil society organizations should know some of the immediate results
> of RSF's actions. While many human rights groups at the Commission on
> Human Rights were certainly in sympathy and agreement with the message
> RSF was communicating, several disagreed vociferously with their
> methods. One direct effect of the RSF action was that every NGO was
> subject to extreme searches for the rest of the CHR, and prevented
> from carrying into meeting rooms of more than a handful of documents
> for fear that each group would stage another similar demonstration.
>
> This was the first year that the Commission on Human Rights has ever
> held a high-level segment. One important goal of the high-level
> segment was to bring more political weight and financial support for
> the work of the CHR, which in recent years has suffered from severe
> budget cuts effecting the basic functioning of the meeting, including
> meeting times, translations, meeting rooms, etc. By disrupting the
> high-level segment, it will certainly be taken into consideration when
> the Commission decides whether to hold it again in subsequent years.
>
> I am not opposed to civil disobedience, which has its place when other
> means of protest and negotiation have been exhausted. But civil
> society organizations need to be clear about where they stand on
> whether or not we choose to respect the rules of participation. RSF
> chose to do their action, I believe in full understanding of the
> immediate and longer-term effect of that action. However I think we
> need to be clear that NGOs in general have the responsibility to
> participate in a constructive and fair manner, in the same way that we
> expect governments to respect the rules of procedure. If an NGO
> chooses to not follow those rules of procedure, there are > consequences.
>
> As we fight for our rights to participate effectively in the WSIS
> process, we need to be clear that we do not intend to simply shout at
> government representatives, to shower them with flyers, but that we
> want to engage constructively and respectfully in the negotiations.
>
>
> Rik Panganiban
> (in my personal capacity)
>
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