By Hillel Neuer. From the National Post
There is no food and no clean water, nothing,” Mahmoud, a
12-year-old boy from Homs, Syria, told Reuters Thursday. “There is no shop open
and we only have one meal a day. How can we live like that and survive?”
According
to the World Food Program, half a million people don’t have enough to eat in
Syria. Fears are growing that the regime is using hunger as a weapon.
This
is the kind of emergency which should attract the attention of the UN Human
Rights Council’s hunger monitor, who has the ability to spotlight situations
and place them on the world agenda. Yet Olivier de Schutter of Belgium, the
“Special Rapporteur on the right to food,” is not going to Syria.
Instead, the UN’s food monitor is coming to investigate Canada.
That’s
right. Despite dire food emergencies around the globe, De Schutter will be
devoting the scarce time and resources of the international community on an
11-day tour of Canada—a country that ranks at the bottom of global hunger
concerns.
A key
co-ordinator and promoter of De Schutter’s mission is Food Secure Canada, a
lobby group whose website accuses the Harper government of “failing
Canadians…and [failing to] fulfill the right to food for all.” The group calls
instead for a “People’s Food Policy.”
I
asked De Schutter if his time wouldn’t better be spent on calling attention to
countries that actually have starving people.
“Globally,
1.3 billion people are overweight or obese,” he responded via his spokesperson,
“and this causes a range of diseases such as certain types of cancers,
cardio-vascular diseases or (especially) type-2 diabetes that are a huge
burden.”
In
other words, the hunger expert is not even that interested in hunger, but the
opposite. Sure, we should all eat less fries, but do Canadians need a costly UN
inquiry to tell us that?
Before
Canadians can take De Schutter seriously, they ought to ask him some serious
questions about whether his mission is about human rights or a political
agenda.
First,
consider the origins of the UN’s “right to food” mandate. In voluminous
background information provided by De Schutter and his local promoters, there’s
no mention that their sponsor was Cuba, a country where some women resort to
prostitution for food. De Schutter does not want you to know that Havana’s
Communist government created his post, nor that the co-sponsors included China,
North Korea, Iran and Zimbabwe.
These
and other repressive regimes are seeking a political weapon to attack the West.
That is why the first person they chose to fill the post, when it started in
2000, was Jean Ziegler. The former Swiss Socialist politician was a man they
could trust: In 1989, he announced to the world the creation of the Muammar
Gaddafi Human Rights Prize.
The
award spread propaganda for its namesake, and elevated his ideological allies.
Recipients include Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez. In 2002, the prize went to
convicted French Holocaust denier Roger Garaudy — and to Jean Ziegler himself.
From
2000 to 2008, Ziegler’s UN reports and probes turned a blind eye to the world’s
hungry. Instead he attacked America, the West, capitalism and Israel. The human
rights council applauded him, and repeatedly renewed his mandate. Only because
of term limits did they replace him in 2008 with De Schutter, who praises and
emulates his predecessor.
De
Schutter’s consistent argument is that if there is hunger, Western countries
are to blame. His attacks on international trade are so ideologically extreme
that even Pascal Lamy, head of the World Trade Organization and a member of the
French Socialist party, criticized De Schutter’s approach for threatening to
drive food prices higher and “exacerbating the negative impacts on poor
consumers.”
Second,
even when they visit the right countries, Ziegler and De Schutter reach the
wrong conclusions. Ziegler went to Cuba, but it was a staged visit that hailed
Castro’s policies as almost divine. De Schutter went to Syria—in 2010, long
before the current crisis — and mentioned several problems, but his report took
pains to repeatedly praise the Assad regime.
Like
Ziegler, De Schutter has repeatedly made one-sided attacks on Israel lacking
any nexus to his mandate. Last July, he issued a pre-emptive attack against his
own boss, in a press release titled “UN Special Rapporteur opposes Ban
Ki-Moon’s conclusions on flotilla.” De Schutter was outraged that a panel
appointed by the UN chief found that Israel’s blockade of Gaza, to stop Hamas
importing Iranian missiles, was actually legal — contradicting what De
Schutter’s human rights council had said the year before.
Hunger
is a human rights issue. Tragically, what most interests De Schutter and his
council is scapegoating the West. For the next two weeks, that means Canada.
Hillel Neuer, originally of
Montreal, is executive director of UN Watch in Geneva
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