In his final address to the Human Rights Council on 26 February 2018, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Prince Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein decried the "pernicious use of the veto" by permanent members of the UN Security Council -
the USA, Russia, and China in particular - to block any unity of action to reduce the extreme suffering of innocent
people in "the most prolific slaughterhouse of humans in recent times."
However, it is not only the veto in the Security Council which prevents governments from acting. There is a
wide-spread failure of governments to act. "Time and again, my office and I have brought to the attention of the international community violations of human rights
which should have served as a trigger for preventive action. Time and again, there has been minimal action."
He continued by mentioning States in which armed conflicts were the framework for constant human rights violations,
including the fundamental right to life: Syria, Yemen, Myanmar, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
He highlighted the growing wave of narrow nationalism promoted by political parties and in some cases by the
leaders of government. " Xenophobes and racists in Europe are casting off any sense of embarrassment - like Hungary's Viktor Orban who earlier
this month said 'We do not want our colour...to be mixed in with others' "
He concluded with a warning and an encouragement to action. "It is accumulating unresolved human rights violations which will spark the conflicts that can break the world...For the
worst offenders' disregard and contempt for human rights will be the eventual undoing of all of us. This we cannot allow
to happen."
In the light of the use of the veto in the UN Security Council and the realpolitik considerations of States in general, it is the task of non-governmental organizations (NGO) to promote the resolution of
armed conflicts through negotiations in good faith and the respect of humanitarian international law while the armed
conflicts go on. NGOs must work so that universal human rights are the basis of society at all times.
In order to carry out these crucial tasks, NGOs must become stronger, have greater access to the media, increase
their networks to more countries, and develop greater cooperation among themselves. These challenges require a wise use
of current resources and efforts to increase them. There is a need to increase cooperation with universities and other
academic institutions for background information and analysis. Government representatives always look for factual errors
in NGO presentations as a way to discredit the whole presentation. Dialogue with the representatives of governments must
be continued and, if possible, made more regular. States will continue to be important agents in the world society, and
we must try to be in contact even when government actions are unreasonable, even criminal.
Cooperation among NGOs will facilitate an outreach to more sectors of the world society. Often a specific NGO
will reach a particular milieu - religious, geographic, professional, social class. By cooperation a wider audience can
be reached, and techniques for positive action set out.
As the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights stressed armed violence, systematic repression, waves of hate and
xenophobia are strong today, and there is a real danger that they will grow. To meet these negative challenges, we who
uphold the unity of the human family must organize ever-more effectively.
Rene Wadlow, President, Association of World Citizens