1st March 2011 Geneva, Switzerland
A visit from the boss (and everyone else’s)
I always think that Ministerial programmes bring out the best in diplomats. Like the first day of school, they groom themselves to perfection (my wife always knows it’s Ministerial week by the fact that my shoes get their annual polish) and then spend their days proving that they can do everything from writing a last minute statement to arranging transport, nourishment and amateur photography for the Ministerial entourage.
My boss Peter Gooderham with the Foreign Secretary William Hague.
For the UK it was a particularly big occasion, with a visit by Foreign Secretary William Hague. It was the first time we’d had such a senior UK visitor in almost 10 years – and without wanting to reveal how long I’ve been here, yes, I was there for that one too. The Foreign Secretary spent most of the day in meetings with Ministerial counterparts working to build support on responding to the crisis in Libya. This was also his main focus when he addressed the Council at lunchtime. Since I had nothing to do with the drafting I don’t mind saying that it was a real humdinger of a statement. “This is a warning to anyone contemplating the abuse of human rights in Libya or in any other country” he said, “stay your hand; there will be a day of reckoning and the reach of international justice can be long”. Top stuff.
When she did finally appear, Mrs Clinton was worth the wait and she spoke with rousing conviction. She had commendably strong words for Libya, as well as for Burma and North Korea. She also pulled no punches in her comments about the ongoing horrendous human rights situation in Iran. She formally announced that the US and a group of countries from all regions would seek to establish a Human Rights Special Rapporteur on Iran during the March session which would provide an independent UN assessment on human rights in Iran– something which the situation in that country needed desperately for years.