- Fri May 21, 2021 4:53 pm
#87251
Tanaya,
That quotation is the relevant information for the answer.
Answer choice (B) is not requiring anyone to take action. It's almost doing the opposite - unanimous acceptance is required before implementation, so the procedure discussed in this answer would, if anything, slow down any response. It's not going to make any member state take action on human rights, but instead put a bunch of hoops (votes) to jump through before any action is accomplished. The delegates and representatives in lines 11-14 wanted action to prevent, stop, or remedy human rights abuses - voting would be useless action to them unless accompanied by substantive actions that correct abuses.
Answer choice (C) is a little better than answer choice (B), in that it's supporting some action taken, but the action isn't substantive action that directly correct abuses. A vote of censure really doesn't do anything. Consider the victims of human rights abuses. I don't think they'd argue AGAINST a vote of censure against the entities that have abused their rights, but they'd much rather have actual action taken to stop the abuses. And it seems like the people in lines 11-14 were looking for that kind of action, not censures which might not lead to any action beyond the censure itself.
Answer choice (A) is precisely getting the responsible state to correct the abuses under their watch. That's the kind of action we want.
Robert Carroll