10 During the first session of the Working Group, held from 19 to 30 October 1992, Article 16 of the revised Costa Rica Draft of 1991 was discussed under ‘Logistics and financial considerations’.14 The general approach of most delegations was that the implementation of the proposed system and the operations of the SPT should not be jeopardized by inadequate financing. There should be an assurance of sufficient financial and other resources, on a continuing basis, to meet the needs of the efficient operation of the system. Most representatives expressed the view that Article 16 needed further consideration, based on a financial evaluation of the projected costs of implementing the Protocol. Delegations requested the preparation of a detailed financial analysis of the costs associated with the operation of the proposed system of visits, to be provided to the Working Group in the course of its future deliberations.
11 Many delegations supported the principle that expenditures deriving from the implementation of the Protocol should be borne by the regular UN budget. Reference was made in this connection to the proposal made by the meeting of Chairpersons of the supervisory bodies that all treaty bodies be financed from the regular UN budget and that all new instruments should provide for the financing of new bodies from the regular budget. Further consideration would be needed, however, in light of the decision taken by the General Assembly at its forty-seventh session on the effective operation of the treaty bodies. If the General Assembly proposed changes to the CAT to allocate costs of the CAT Committee to the general budget, it was suggested that the same system should apply to the Protocol. The reliance on voluntary contributions, or on payments by States parties alone, would not provide the necessary assurance of resources to permit sound administration.
12 Some delegations nevertheless found that the idea that States parties should bear the expenditures should be retained for consideration. Others feared that if the entire costs were to be borne by States parties, this might inhibit many countries from ratifying the instrument.
13 Several speakers stressed the need for adequate financial resources as a prerequisite to the efficient implementation of the Protocol and expressed the fear that voluntary contributions would not be sufficient for this purpose. A number of delegations expressed the opinion that in a time of significant financial constraints, the establishment of this mechanism should not be at the expense of the effective functioning of other areas of the human rights treaty system.
14 At the fourth Working Group session from 30 October to 10 November 1995, it was the general approach of all delegations that the expenditures incurred in the implementation of the Protocol and the activities of the special fund should be dealt with in separate Articles.15
15 Most delegations supported the principle that expenditure deriving from the implementation of the Protocol should be borne by the regular UN budget. Reference was (p. 969) made to GA Resolution 47/111 of 16 December 1992, in which the Assembly endorsed respective amendments to two conventions, including CAT, providing for the financing of the CAT Committee from the regular budget.
16 The representative of Cuba suggested deleting the introductory part of Article 16, and the observer for Nigeria also stated that the contributions should be paid by the States parties themselves.
17 The delegation of the United States of America called on other delegations to take into account the financial situation of the United Nations and the resource situation of the Centre for Human Rights. It would not be advisable to impose a financial burden on the Centre unless it was assured that the Centre would receive additional resources for servicing that additional body, which would be quite expensive. It believed that the Working Group should place on record that if regular budget funding was decided upon, the Secretary-General should provide additional resources from within the existing regular UN budget to compensate the Centre of Human Rights for the additional expenses occasioned by the establishment of the SPT.
18 The majority of delegations, however, expressed the belief that the financial difficulties of the United Nations were temporary. It was generally felt that it was necessary to draft Article 16(2) along the lines of Article 18(3) CAT. Thus, a paragraph with such wording was added as paragraph 2.16
19 At the fifth plenary meeting on 9 November 1995, the Chairperson of the informal drafting group submitted the text of Article 16, stating that it was proposed that the article should contain two paragraphs, setting out that the expenditure incurred in the implementation of the Protocol should be borne by the United Nations. Paragraph 2 stipulated that the UN Secretary-General should provide the necessary staff and facilities for the effective performance of the SPT. The Working Group then agreed on this proposal.17
20 At the sixth session, held from 13 to 24 October 1997, the representatives of Cuba and Egypt once again stated that States parties should be responsible for the expenditures incurred by the implementation of the present Protocol.18 The observer for Amnesty International noted that human rights work was an integral part of the mainstream work of the United Nations, that special funding could be uncertain and payment difficult to ensure, and that independence would be best guaranteed by regular budget funding. She recalled the problem of funding of the CAT Committee which eventually resulted in a change of funding from States parties to the regular budget. At the fourth plenary meeting on 14 October 1997, paragraph 2 of Article 16 was adopted without amendments.19 At the sixth plenary meeting on 15 October 1997 the Chairperson of the drafting group decided to place a full stop after the words ‘United Nations’ and to delete the bracketed text. At the same meeting, paragraph 1 of Article 16 was adopted.20
21 During the ninth session from 12 to 23 February 2001, while considering the alternative draft text proposed by Mexico with the support of GRULAC, some delegations raised concerns about the financial implications of creating national and international mechanisms. They expressed reluctance to accept that the international mechanism should be funded under the regular UN budget and asked to receive information from the Secretariat concerning what the budget cost of the proposed mechanisms might be.21
(p. 970) 22 At the tenth session of the Working Group from 14 to 25 January 2002, the delegation of the United States of America suggested that it would not be appropriate to fund the international visiting mechanism from the regular UN budget, as that would mean that every member of the United Nations would contribute to the mechanism whether or not it was a party to the OP. Therefore, the costs should be borne by the States parties to the Protocol themselves. Furthermore, the delegation, supported by the delegation of Saudi Arabia, expressed concern about the financial implications of creating an international mechanism and the budgetary consequences of such a mechanism on other human rights mechanisms.22
23 The delegations of Sweden, Denmark, and Finland were of the view that the international mechanism should be funded under the regular budget and recalled the provision to that effect contained in the draft presented by the European Union in 2001. This solution would also guarantee the independence and neutrality of the mechanism.23
24 The delegation of the Netherlands underlined the importance of financing through the regular budget. The UN treaty system was part of the United Nations and as such all member States contributed (per ratio) to the system, irrespective of the treaties they had signed or ratified. It would also be unfair for States parties to put a price tag on a human rights treaty. That would mean that only rich States would be in a position to become parties to such treaties. Many people would be denied human rights because their governments could not afford to become a party.24
25 According to the proposal presented by the Chairperson-Rapporteur, the SPT would be financed from the regular UN budget. The Chairperson was aware that certain delegations, including that of the United States of America, had very strong feelings about this issue. However, she recalled that this point had already been discussed and negotiated by the Working Group before.25
26 At its fiftieth meeting on 22 April 2002, the Commission on Human Rights finally adopted the text of the OP submitted by the Chairperson-Rapporteur at the tenth session of the Working Group by twenty-nine votes to ten.26