KEY POINTS
  • China's growing global influence poses a serious threat to international human rights, according to a new report, which suggests the UNHRC is failing to counter such risks.
  • Verisk Maplecroft's study said the UNHRC had become a "battleground for competing standards," with China and allied member states showing signs of "watering down international action."
  • It also found that Beijing is using its economic power to sway council votes, with grantees of China's "Belt & Road Initiative" most susceptible to influence.
Campaigners stand opposite the Chinese embassy in London to protest human rights violations by the Chinese government against its Uyghur community.

China's growing global influence poses a serious threat to international human rights, according to a new report, which suggests that the United Nations Human Rights Council — the body established to safeguard such international protections — is failing to counter the risks.

The UNHRC is an inter-governmental body made up of 47 U.N. member states, which are elected on a three-year rotational basis with the stated aim of strengthening the "promotion and protection of human rights" globally.