UN: United Nations secretary general Kofi Annan has expressed concern over the decision of the Bush administration to oppose a UN resolution calling for the creation of a new human rights council.
The US position was announced by John Bolton, the US ambassador to the UN, on Monday when he said a draft charter presented on Thursday by the UN General Assembly president, Jan Eliasson, was not tough enough to ensure that nations that abuse human rights would be barred from joining the council.
He said he was under instructions from Washington to reopen negotiations on the text or postpone deliberations on a new rights body for several months.
Mr Annan and other supporters of the compromise warned that there is no better deal to be struck, and that the US strategy could undermine their efforts to create an improved, though imperfect, human rights body.
"I think we should not let the better be the enemy of the good," Mr Annan told reporters in Geneva.
The United States and the United Nations have been pressing for nearly a year to set up a strengthened human rights council to replace the 53-member Human Rights Commission.
The reputation of the Geneva-based panel, which helped draft the landmark Universal Declaration of Human Rights, has recently been tainted by the frequent election of members with dismal human rights records, such as Sudan and Zimbabwe.
Senior US and UN officials had sought to prevent countries with poor rights records from joining the new organisation by raising the membership standards, and requiring a two-thirds vote of the 191-member General Assembly for any nation's admittance.
But the proposal met stiff resistance, and the current draft resolution would require members to be elected by an absolute majority - at least 96 countries.
"I say this really more in sorrow than in anger, but we're very disappointed with the draft that was produced last Thursday. We don't think it's acceptable," Mr Bolton told reporters.
Mr Annan, UN human rights commissioner Louise Arbour, and two leading human rights organisations (Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International) say the compromise proposal is still worth supporting.
They have been joined by former US president Jimmy Carter and several other Nobel Prize winners, who issued a joint letter calling on the US and other governments to back the deal.
Mr Annan, who discussed the human rights council on Sunday with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, appealed on Monday for the United States to "join the vast majority of governments who seem ready to accept" Mr Eliasson's proposal.
He and other supporters said the proposal constituted a serious improvement on the existing Human Rights Commission.
They noted that provisions to subject all council members to scrutiny of their human rights record would discourage countries with poor records from joining. They also said council members suspected of abusive behaviour can be suspended by a vote of two-thirds of the UN membership present.
The new council would consist of 47 members selected by secret ballot on the basis of "geographical distribution" and committed to "uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights".
Members would be elected for as many as two three-year terms at a time and would meet for at least 10 weeks throughout the year.