Posted: 2022-10-07 12:16:54

The UN's top human rights body voted to appoint an independent expert to step up scrutiny of Russia's human rights record at home, as arbitrary arrests, a crackdown on dissenting voices and limits on free speech worsen during the war in Ukraine.

The 47-member Human Rights Council passed the proposal, presented last week by all European Union member countries, except Hungary, on a 17-6 vote, with 24 absent.

Shortly before the vote in Geneva, Russian human rights group Memorial was named a co-winner of the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize.

The original proposal expressed concerns about "mass forced shutdowns" of independent media, non-governmental organisations and opposition groups in Russia.

The Human Rights Council majority agreed to name a "special rapporteur" to keep tabs on rights violations in Russia, in part by relying on help from Russian groups and activists who are both still in the country and abroad.

The council previously appointed a Commission of Inquiry — the UN-backed body's highest form of scrutiny — that is looking into rights abuses related to Russia's war in Ukraine.

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