نگاهی اخلاقی به تحریمهای منشوری با لحاظ تاثیرات حقوقی آن برنسل دوم حقوق بشر
محورهای موضوعی : اخلاق و تربیت اسلامیحسین اخوان 1 , سید باقر میرعباسی 2 , ابومحمد عسگرخانی 3
1 - 0
2 - دانشگاه تهران
3 - دانشگاه تهران
کلید واژه: شورای امنیت, تحریم های منشوری, حقوق بشر, نسل دوم حقوق بشر, حقوق اقتصادی,
چکیده مقاله :
از زمان تأسیس سازمان ملل تا سال 2015 کشورهای زیادی براساس فصل هفت منشور تحت تحریم شورای امنیت قرار گرفته اند . افزایش اعمال تحریم از جانب شورای امنیت نگرانی فزایندهای را در ارتباط با خسارات وارده بر شهروندان کشورهای تحت تحریم موجب گردید. تحقیقاتی که درخصوص اثرات تحریم در کشورهایی مانند عراق ، هائیتی ، لیبی وایران انجام شده، حاکی از آن است که این تحریمها موجب افزایش شدید مرگ و میر کودکان، گسترش فقر، مهاجرت، کمبود مواد غذایی و دارو و سایر نابسامانیهای اجتماعی و اقتصادی گردید. در نتیجه، مباحث گستردهای در سطح سازمان ملل و خارج آن در خصوص انتقاد از تحریمهای شورای امنیت و همچنین مسئولیت آن شورا در قبال نقض حقوق بشر بهویژه نسل دوم حقوق بشر شهروندان مطرح است. در این نوشتار، ابعاد حقوق بشری تحریمهای منشوری برنسل دوم مورد بررسی قرار گرفته است. به عقیده نگارنده، تحریمهای شورای امنیت به دلیل تأثیرات منفی شدید آن برکشورهای هدف ، در انطباق با هنجارهای حقوق بشری به ویژه حقوق اقتصادی و اجتماعی و اعمال این تحریمها منجر به نقض فاحش حقوق بشر میگردد. در حالی که منشور سازمان ملل، آن سازمان را به " ارتقا و احترام به حقوق بشر" متعهد نموده است، اعمال تحریمهای اقتصادی توسط شورای امنیت نقض مفاد منشور بوده و مسئولیت نقض حقوق بشر را متوجه آن شورا مینماید.
Since the establishment of the United Nations, many countries have been subject to sanctions by the Security Council under Chapter 7 of the Charter. The increase in sanctions imposed by the Security Council has raised concerns about the damage done to the citizens of the sanctioned countries. Research on the effects of sanctions in countries such as Iraq, Haiti, Libya and Iran suggests that these sanctions increased the deaths of children, poverty, migration, food and drug deficits, and other social and economic disruptions. Consequently, there are widespread debates at the UN and abroad about criticism of the Security Council sanctions as well as the responsibility of the Council for the violation of human rights, especially the second generation of human rights of citizens. In this essay, the human rights dimensions of the bansel sanctions of the second Barnsl has been examined. According to the author, sanctions imposed by the Security Council on human rights violations, in particular with regard to economic and social rights and sanctions imposed by the Security Council, result in serious violations of the human rights of the Security Council because of its severe negative effects on the target countries. While the United Nations Charter has committed that organization to "promoting and respecting human rights," the UN Security Council's economic sanctions are in breach of the provisions of the Charter and are responsible for violating human rights.
Bossuyt, Marc (2010), The adverse consequences of economic sanctions on the enjoyment of human rights, (E/CN.4/Sub.2/2000/33).
Boutros Ghali, Boutros (1995), Supplement to an agenda for peace, S/1995/1.
Boutros Ghali, Boutros (1999), Unvanquished, Random Hous, INC, New York.
Brzoska, Michael (ed.), (2001), Design and Implementation of Arms Embargoes and Travel and Aviation Related Sanctions: Results of the “Bonn-Berlin Process” Bonn International Center for Conversion, Bonn.
Center for Economic and Social Rights (1996), UN Sanctioned Suffering: A Human Rights Assessment of United Nations Sanctions on Iraq, New York: Center for Economic and Social Rights.
Conlon, Paul (2001), United Nations Sanctions Management: A Case Study of the Iraq Sanctions Committee, 1990-1994 (Procedural Aspects of International Law Series), Hotei Publishing.
Cortright, David and Lopez, George A. (2014), The Sanctions Decade: Assessing UN Strategies in the 1990s, Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Cortright, David and Lopez, George A. (2002), Sanctions and the search for security: challenges to UN action, Boulder: L. Rienner Publishers.
Cortright, David, Lopez, George A., Minear, Larry, & Weiss, Thomas G. (1998), Toward More Human and Effective Sanctions Management: Enhancing the Capacity of the United Nations System, The Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International Studies.
Dedring, Juergen, (2013), The United Nations Security Council in the 1990s, State University of New York Press, New York.
Farral, Jeremy (2010), The World Summit process and UN sanctions reform: between rhetoric and force, in Peter G. Danchin and Horst Fischer (eds.), UN reform and collective security, Cambridge University Press.
Farrall, Jeremy and Rubenstein, Kim, (eds), (2009), Sanctions, Accountability and Governance in a Globalised World (Connecting International Law with Public Law), 1st edn, Cambridge University Press.
Farrall, Jeremy (2008), United Nations Sanctions and the Rule of Law, 1st edn, Cambridge University Press.
Fasulo, Linda (2009), An Insider Guide to the UN, 2nd edn, Yale University Press.
Garfield, Richard (1999), Morbidity and mortality among Iraqi children from 1990 through 1998: assessing the impact of the Gulf war and economic sanctions, (www.cam.ac.uk/societies/casi)
Genugten, W. Van (2003), United Nations Sanctions: Effectiveness and Effects, Especially in the Field of Human Rights, a Multi-Disciplinary Approach, Intersentia.
Price, Richard M. and Zacher Mark W., (eds), (2004), The United Nations and Global Security, 1st edn, Palgrave Macmillan.
Reisman, W. Michael and Stevick, Douglas L., (1998), The Applicability of International Law Standards to United Nations Economic Sanctions Programmes, European Journal of International Law, No. 9.
United Nations Inter-Agency Standing Committee and Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), (2004), Sanctions Assessment Handbook, United Nations, New York.
Vone Sponeck, Hans, C. (2006), A Different Kind of War: The UN Sanctions Regime in Iraq, Berghahn Books