The UN Charter establishes six 'principal organs'. Five of these are
expressly authorized or permitted to deal with human rights. The single
exception is the Security Council, but the Council has increasingly
concerned itself with human rights inside sovereign states. This book
recounts how this trend has developed in the Security Council,
reluctantly at first but since 1989 with some enthusiasm and
responsibility. Some Third-World countries are uneasy at this
development, fearing that the Security Council, dominated by a single
superpower, will interfere in the internal affairs of states without the
agreement of the government concerned.