What are human rights groups hiding?
By Itai Reuveni
Israel Hayon
August 1, 2019
The past two years have been tough for the larger humanitarian aid organizations and they have had to struggle to keep their aura of altruism intact.
A number of large organizations have had to fight accusations of sexual harassment, employee harassment and the mismanagement of donor funds.
On Monday, a confidential report by the United Nations Ethics Committee was leaked to the media and with it the panel's recommendations to censure the head of the notorious United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) for "abusing their authority for their own benefit, suppressing legitimate internal opposition, and achieving personal goals in inappropriate ways," as well as for misusing the funds raised for humanitarian aid.
For decades, the human rights industry has touted a halo that over the years became a defensive wall against any criticism from home and abroad.
The senior officials in these organizations were automatically perceived as angels and anyone who dared to criticize or call for reforms in major international organizations, such as Amnesty and Human Rights Watch, was blasted for trying to undermine their good work.
But the immunity enjoyed by these bodies soon became destructive to the very human rights they are sworn to protect. Professionals have been replaced by extreme political activists; rights campaigns and aid projects gave way to media campaigns; entire populations have been excluded from the focus of these organizations, and the concept of human rights as a universal value soon dissolved into political interests.
A year ago the world learned that Oxfam, one of the largest international aid organizations, compiled a confidential internal report documenting how senior Oxfam officials exploited their status to operate a prostitution network abusing underage earthquake survivors.
The report was kept from Oxfam's donors – especially donor countries - so as not to damage its reputation. Oxfam, by the way, was very vocal in its demand for an international boycott of Israel's SodaStream over its "immoral" operations in Judea and Samaria.
Amnesty, which refuses to deal with anti-Semitism in Europe and which is obsessed with Israel, is currently at the center of a serious case of employee abuse that is so severe, two of its employees have committed suicide.
In this case, as in the cases of UNRWA and Oxfam, the investigation was conducted secretly and far from the eyes of the donors and the public, so as to avoid tarnishing the organization's reputation.
Irresponsibility, lack of transparency and lack of oversight are common in the human rights and international aid industry, where many groups have long abandoned the principles of neutrality, promoting universal values and independence from political interests.
The cases of UNRWA, Oxfam, Amnesty, and many other groups underscore the claim that in these types of organizations ideology trumps ethics, proper management and values that they have pledged to promote.
By the way, it seems that the Swiss government has decided to suspend its funding for UNRWA – allegations of financial mismanagement were apparently successful where proof of anti-Semitism, support for terrorism, and the indoctrination of hatred via education failed.
The same phenomenon exists on the donor side as well, especially in foreign governments. The funds are tainted by ulterior motives, and it is not always possible to know how appropriation decisions were made.
One must remember that human rights and humanitarian aid organizations are ordinary organizations, and their employees are human beings who are not necessarily more – or less – moral than others. It is precisely because of their pretense of being morally superior that they must face scrutiny and thereby protect human rights values from political abuse.
Such organizations must be completely transparent. If they have been able to hide sex and embezzlement scandals from governments and countries, one can only imagine what they might be hiding with respect to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and other issues.
3 comments:
The United Nations has an Ethics Committee? I assume it's made up of members of the United Nations. That's hilarious!
That is kind of like asking NAMBLA to investigate child molestation by priests.
NAMBLA - North American Man-Boy Love Association. Its agenda is to repeal laws prohibiting adult men from having sex with boys under the age of consent, and to repeal laws regarding age of consent in general.
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