11.5 C
New York

Nigeria: Not ‘Snubbed’ – Nigerian Government Says It Wasn’t a Candidate for Election to the UN Human Rights Council

Published:


Not ‘snubbed’ – Nigerian government says it wasn’t a candidate for election to the UN Human Rights Council

IN SHORT: Nigeria received three votes in the October 2024 elections for the United Nations Human Rights Council. But the president’s spokesperson says that the country wasn’t snubbed – it didn’t stand for the election.

The Human Rights Council is the principal intergovernmental human rights body of the United Nations (UN).

It is the successor to the former United Nations Commission on Human Rights. According to the UN:

  • The council consists of 47 member states elected directly and individually by a majority of the 193 states of the UN General Assembly.
  • Elections are held every year. Seats are distributed equitably among the UN’s five regional groups, with one-third of the membership renewed each year.
  • Each member serves a three-year term. Membership is limited to two consecutive terms.
  • By December 2022, 123 of the 193 UN Member States had been represented on the council.

The most recent election was in October 2024, with the next term starting on 1 January 2025.

It is in this context that some posts on Facebook claim Nigeria lost its bid to join the council after receiving only three votes.

One of the posts reads: “BREAKING: Nigeria Gets Only 3 Votes As Bid To Join The UN Human Rights Council Gets Rejected. Ghana (179) And Burundi (168) Have Been Voted In. Malawi (182) And Côte d’Ivoire (181) Were Each Re-elected For Second Terms.”