A blog of the Brazil Institute
Brazil sided with unusual allies at a recent United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) meeting in Geneva, underscoring just how much Brazil鈥檚 international stance on human rights and gender equality has shifted under the Bolsonaro administration. At the UNHRC鈥檚 41st session, held from June 24 to July 12, the 47-member council adopted a slew of resolutions covering a wide range of issues, from the human rights situation in Eritrea to the impact of corruption on human rights. In clear departure from its traditional position, Brazil鈥攚hich is seeking reelection to the UNHRC this year鈥攁bstained from a number of resolutions aimed at gender- and sexuality-based protections and supported conservative amendments from that sought to weaken language protecting the rights of women and girls to make their own reproductive choices.
In response to the Netherlands鈥 proposed resolution to combat forced and child marriage, which noted that are married before the age of 18 (A/HRC/41/L.8/Rev.1), Brazil鈥攁long with Bahrain, Somalia, and Qatar鈥攙oted in favor of an amendment proposed by Egypt and Iraq to eliminate the notion of a 鈥渞ight to sexual and reproductive health鈥 from the resolution鈥檚 text. Brazil also supported a second amendment proposed by Bahrain and Saudi Arabia to grant parents and guardians the right to decide whether their daughters required sex education, overriding the call for sexuality education for adolescents (boys and girls), according to age level and maturity. In a proposed amendment to a resolution on eliminating sex and gender-based discrimination, Brazil voted with Pakistan to do away with a call for member states to 鈥済uarantee universal access to evidence-based comprehensive sexuality education鈥 (A/HRC/41/L.6/Rev.1). The government of Bangladesh also voted in favor of this amendment, warning that sex education could lead to greater 鈥減romiscuity and abortion.鈥
Brazil did not justify any of its votes, but it is clear that Ambassador Maria Nazareth Farani Azev锚do (a career diplomat and former chief of staff to Foreign Minister Celso Amorim) voted in line with President Bolsonaro鈥檚 foreign policy, made explicit in the Brazilian government鈥檚 to the UNHRC seat. The letter makes no mention of LGBTQ+ rights, gender, reproductive rights, torture, or inequality. Instead, it states that Brazil plans to prioritize "the strengthening of family structures." This is a marked shift for a country that, just a few years earlier, introduced a UNHRC resolution condemning violence and discrimination based on sexual identity and gender鈥攁 resolution opposed by many of the same member states that Brazil is now voting with.
Troublingly, this new human rights agenda at the United Nations鈥攚hich mirrors Bolsonaro鈥檚 domestic social agenda鈥攑atently ignores the real challenges that women and girls currently face in Brazil. According to the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF), Brazil has the in the world; one in five babies in Brazil is born to a mother between the ages of ten and 19; and maternal mortality rates are five to ten times higher in Brazil than in other countries with similar levels of economic development. Moreover, while Bolsonaro has stated on several occasions that he is against sex-ed in schools, the majority of Brazilians in the school curriculum.
At the UNHRC, the amendments failed in the face of substantial opposition from the rest of the council. In Brazil, it will fall to democratic institutions and society more broadly to hold the government accountable on gender and sexuality human rights.
Authors

Senior Director, Albright Stonebridge Group
Brazil Institute
The Brazil Institute鈥攖he only country-specific policy institution focused on Brazil in Washington鈥攁ims to deepen understanding of Brazil鈥檚 complex landscape and strengthen relations between Brazilian and US institutions across all sectors. Read more
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