World
        

Politics

UN Human Rights Council adopts resolution on Syria

Updated: 2011-04-30 09:01

(Xinhua)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

GENEVA - The United Nations Human Rights Council adopted a resolution on Syria at a special session held on Friday amid strong voices of disapproval from many member states.

The resolution condemned the use of lethal violence against peaceful protesters by the Syrian authorities and requested the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to dispatch a mission to Syria "to investigate all alleged violations of international human rights law."

Meanwhile, at the insistence of many developing countries that feared human rights issue could be used as pretext to attain political objectives and intrusion on the sovereignty of independent nations, the resolution reaffirmed that all UN member states should refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any states.

As members of the council failed to reach consensus on the resolution during its debate, the session went into the voting process to make the final decision.

Among the 47 members of the council, 26 voted in favor of the resolution, and 9 opposed, showing a clear sign of divided views.

The special session concerning the "situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic" was convened at the request of the United States, backed by 15 other member states of the council, many of them strong allies to the US in human rights issues, such as Belgium, France, Japan, Norway, Spain and Britain.

E-paper

Head on

Chinese household care goods producers eye big cities, once stronghold of multinational players

Carving out a spot
Back onto center stage 
The Chinese recipe

European Edition

Specials

British Royal Wedding

Full coverage of the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton in London. Best wishes

The final frontier

Xinjiang is a mysterious land of extremes that never falls to fascinate.

Bridging the gap

Tsinghua University attracts a cohort of foreign students wanting to come to China.

25 years after Chernobyl
Luxury car show
Peking Opera revival