States can restrict protests on public health grounds, UN says

States can restrict protests on public health grounds, UN says

by Joseph Anthony
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Protesters argue over burning American flags and leaflets with the flag, even as other protesters disagreed with the act, during a protest against racial inequality and police violence near Black Lives Matter Plaza

Governments have the right to restrict protests on public health grounds, the U.N. Human Rights Committee said on Wednesday.

The committee stepped in to formulate its legal interpretation having seen a gap in the international norms being tested even before the coronavirus pandemic.

But with the proliferation of Black Lives Matter protests and others demonstrations when authorities are trying to stem the spread of COVID-19, the matter has become more pressing.

The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, signed by 173 countries, including the United States and China, has always allowed for restrictions to be placed on the rights of peaceful assembly on grounds including public health and the new document, called a โ€œgeneral commentโ€, confirmed that.

โ€œThe protection of โ€˜public healthโ€™ ground may exceptionally permit restrictions to be imposed, for example where there is an outbreak of an infectious disease and gatherings are dangerous,โ€ the report said.

The documentโ€™s author, Christof Heyns, said the legal interpretation was intended to set out the โ€œrules of the game not just for protesters but for policeโ€.

On the issue of whether protesters are allowed to wear masks to hide their identity as pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong have, the report said they had the right to wear them.

It also says that public order, one of the other grounds on which governments can restrict assemblies, โ€œshould not be used undulyโ€.

Asked about whether a state requirement to wear face coverings during the pandemic was a human rights violation, Heyns told Reuters: โ€œItโ€™s understandable and acceptable that for health reasons there may be limits on your rights.โ€

However his comments on COVID face coverings were not part of the official legal report. In parts of the United States, as well as Australia, the issue of mask-wearing has been divisive in some cases resulting in anti-mask protests.

The 18-person U.N. Human Rights Committee does not have enforcement powers but it reviews the party statesโ€™ implementation of its rules and may call them out for not conforming.

REUTERS

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