Global Update 56th Session Of The Human Rights Council - “We Must Urgently Find Our Way Back To Peace,” Says Türk
Mr.
President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished
delegates,
It pains me to start my Global Update to this
Council, once again, with the cruelty of war.
Last March,
I spoke of the right to peace.
Since then, conflicts have
only intensified.
Killings and injuries of civilians have
become a daily occurrence.
Destruction of vital
infrastructure a daily occurrence.
Devastating and
reckless.
Children shot at. Hospitals bombed. Heavy
artillery launched on entire communities.
All along with
hateful, divisive, and dehumanising rhetoric.
I am
dismayed by the extent to which warring parties have pushed
beyond the boundaries of what is acceptable - and legal - on
many fronts, with utter contempt for the other, trampling
human rights at their core.
In 2023, data gathered by my
Office shows the number of civilian deaths in armed conflict
soared by 72 per cent.
Horrifyingly, the data indicates
that the proportion of women killed in 2023 doubled and that
of children tripled, compared to the year prior.
I am
appalled by the disregard for international human rights and
humanitarian law by parties to the conflict in Gaza. There
has been unconscionable death and suffering. More than
120,000 people in Gaza, overwhelmingly women and children,
have been killed or injured since 7 October, as a result of
the intensive Israeli offensives. Since Israel escalated its
operations into Rafah in early May, almost one million
Palestinians have been forcibly displaced yet again, while
aid delivery and humanitarian access deteriorated
further.
The situation in the West Bank, including East
Jerusalem, is dramatically deteriorating. As of 15 June, 528
Palestinians, 133 of them children, had been killed by
Israeli security forces and/or settlers since October, in
many cases raising serious concerns of unlawful killings. In
the same period, 23 Israelis have been killed in the West
Bank and Israel in clashes with or attacks by Palestinians,
including 8 members of Israeli security
forces.
Israel’s relentless strikes in Gaza are causing
immense suffering and widespread destruction. The arbitrary
denial and obstruction of humanitarian aid have continued,
and Israel continues to detain arbitrarily thousands of
Palestinians. This must end.
Palestinian armed groups
continue to hold many hostages, and, in some cases in
densely populated areas, putting them and Palestinian
civilians at further risk. These hostages must be
released.
The patterns we have documented raise serious
concerns about the commission of war crimes and other
atrocity crimes.
I call for the binding decisions of the
Security Council and of the International Court of Justice
to be respected.
The occupation must end, accountability
must be served and the internationally agreed two-State
solution must become a reality.
I am extremely worried
about the escalating situation between Lebanon and Israel.
Already 401 people have reportedly been killed in Lebanon,
including paramedics and journalists. Over 90,000 people
have been displaced in Lebanon, and over 60,000 have been
displaced in Israel with 25 Israeli fatalities. Thousands of
buildings have been destroyed. I reiterate my call for a
cessation of hostilities and for actors with influence to
take all possible measures to avert a full-scale war.
The
situation in Ukraine continues to deteriorate. The recent
ground offensive by Russian armed forces into Ukraine’s
Kharkiv region has destroyed entire communities. Residents,
many of them older people, hid in basements, without
electricity, water, or adequate food, as the area came under
intense attacks by explosive weapons with wide area
effects.
Repeated waves of large-scale attacks on energy
infrastructure have destroyed 68 per cent of Ukraine’s
electricity production capacity, bringing the system to a
dangerous tipping point, especially ahead of winter.
I
will provide a dedicated update on 9 July.
Mr.
President,
Sudan is being destroyed in front of our eyes
by two warring parties and affiliated groups. They have
stoked inter-ethnic tensions, denied humanitarian
assistance, arrested human rights defenders, and flagrantly
cast aside the rights of their own people. I put both
Generals on notice for their own responsibility in the
commission of possible war crimes and other atrocity crimes,
including through sexual violence and ethnically motivated
attacks. They are ultimately responsible for the impact of
their actions on civilians, including massive displacement,
impending famine, and an intensifying humanitarian
disaster.
It is vital that ongoing mediation efforts,
including by the African Union, bring this conflict to an
end. Existing civilian initiatives to influence a future
transition also need support. These processes must be
inclusive, to address the conflict’s causes rooted in
exclusion and discrimination.
During my mission to the
Democratic Republic of Congo in April, I felt the immense
suffering of civilians in the east, including those living
in camps for internally displaced people with continued
attacks by armed groups, including the M23, the Allied
Democratic Forces (ADF), CODECO and others. Violence must
end. Efforts of the Government, and regional and
international actors, must focus on bringing about peace,
security, and trust. Hate speech and messages targeting
people based on their ethnicity must stop and the
perpetrators brought to justice. Accountability is key. And
the private sector, including businesses that extract
resources, must also assume their responsibilities.
While
there is a decrease in the intensity of hostilities in the
Syrian Arab Republic compared to past years, there is no
apparent end in sight to the conflict. With ongoing killings
of civilians, destruction of civilian objects, sexual and
gender-based violence, and arbitrary arrests and
intimidation of peaceful protesters. Deaths in custody,
particularly in areas under the control of pro-Government
forces, persist. Syrian returnees continue to face risks,
such as arbitrary arrest and detention and extortion, both
in areas under the control of pro-Government forces, and in
areas controlled by non-State armed groups.
In countries
that have undergone unconstitutional changes of power,
including Burkina Faso which I visited this year, Mali and
Niger, we see transitions becoming longer and longer,
without meaningful national dialogue processes and with
increasing restrictions on civic space to quash dissent.
Moving forward can only happen through inclusivity. And in
the case of Niger, also by finding a solution that respects
the rights of President Bazoum and his family.
Civilians
bear the brunt in the fight against non-State armed groups.
A militarised approach alone will not yield sustainable
results. The social contract between the transitional
authorities and the people must urgently be
restored.
South Sudan is a country exhausted by
inter-communal violence and revenge killings, widespread
attacks on civilians, extrajudicial executions,
conflict-related sexual violence, mismanagement of
resources, food insecurity, and large-scale displacement,
including due to environmental factors. All these challenges
are exacerbated in a fragile pre-electoral context. I urge
the Government to prioritise accountability, address
localised violence, enhance the protection of civilians,
investigate all alleged violations, and bring perpetrators
to justice.
Haiti is the quintessential example of the
spiraling interconnection between entrenched inequalities
and violence. Decades of exclusion poor governance,
corruption, and trafficking in weapons, have contributed to
endemic gang violence and the dramatic situation we are
facing today. Health centres, schools, State institutions
and strategic infrastructure have been targeted by gang
members. I call for the urgent deployment of the
Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti, with human
rights safeguards, to support the national police and bring
security to the Haitian people.
I will not speak about
the situation in Myanmar now since I will address it in
detail later this morning.
Mr. President,
We urgently
need to find our way back to peace, in line with the UN
Charter and international law.
As of the end of May 2024,
the gap between humanitarian funding requirements and
available resources stands at 40.8 billion USD. Appeals are
funded at an average of 16.1 per cent only.
Contrast this
with the almost 2.5 trillion USD in global military
expenditure in 2023, a 6.8 per cent increase in real terms
from 2022. This was the steepest year-on-year increase since
2009.
In addition to inflicting unbearable human
suffering, war comes with a hefty price tag.
Mr.
President,
The far-reaching impact of war and conflict on
the environment is also undeniable.
Burning of land,
chemical contamination of air, water and soil, destruction
of civilian infrastructure, even the risk of nuclear
catastrophe.
This comes on top of some of the biggest
challenges humanity faces today — climate change,
biodiversity loss and pollution.
And with every passing
day, humanity’s window of opportunity closes.
La Niña
and El Niño have inflicted severe damage on many countries,
including in Latin America and the Caribbean. 61 million
people in southern Africa are affected by El Niño-induced
drought and extreme weather worsened by climate change.
Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe have declared a state of
disaster, with more countries likely to follow. I echo the
humanitarian community’s warnings of a looming crisis in
the face of imminent harvest failures.
Like most crises,
the climate emergency disproportionately affects the
world’s poor and most marginalised. Countries and
communities who have contributed the least to creating it,
suffer its effects the most – notably in small island
developing States, least developed countries, and landlocked
developing countries.
Climate disasters often collide
with pre-existing challenges, such as food insecurity and
structural discrimination, together with limited resources
due to unsustainable debt levels, lack of fiscal space for
public spending, and barriers to access concessional
financing.
The adverse effects of climate change are
already having massive impacts on the enjoyment of human
rights. We must be prepared. By integrating human rights
into environmental analysis and modelling, we can anticipate
the types of issues that will arise, inform decision-making
and minimise the worst impacts.
Seeking accountability
for environmental harm, including through appropriate use of
criminal law, will help make the right to a clean, healthy,
and sustainable environment a reality on the ground.
Mr.
President,
We talk about human rights as the best tool
for early warning and prevention. But what does this
mean?
It means we must take the drivers and root causes
of tensions, violence, and conflict seriously.
Entrenched
inequalities. Lack of access to basic rights – food,
water, housing, education, decent work, a clean, healthy,
and sustainable environment. Systemic discrimination.
Deficient governance and the quashing of dissenting
voices.
Globally, inequality has seen the largest
increase in three decades, as poorer countries took a bigger
economic hit from the COVID-19 pandemic compared to richer
countries.
According to Oxfam, the wealth of the
world’s five richest billionaires has more than doubled
since the start of this decade, while 60 per cent of
humanity has grown poorer.
4.8 billion people are poorer
than they were in 2019.
And the wealth gap between men
and women globally? 100 trillion USD.
We are a far cry
from the 2030 Agenda’s promise to reach those furthest
behind first.
Almost half of humanity – some 3.3
billion people – live in countries where governments spend
more on servicing their debts than investing in health and
education systems for their people.
While Sri Lanka’s
macro-economic situation has improved, the impacts of the
economic crisis together with associated austerity measures
are affecting the poorest and already marginalized groups
the most. Between 2021 and 2023, the poverty rate doubled
from 13.1 to 25.9 per cent and is expected to remain at such
levels over the next few years.
During my recent visit to
the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, I heard about the
drastic impact debt servicing is having on public spending
on social services, including on social infrastructure,
social protection programmes, health, and education. In my
visits to both Laos and Malaysia, I welcomed the increased
engagement with my Office and with the UN human rights
mechanisms, and I look forward to building on it
further.
In Argentina, recent proposed and adopted
measures risk undermining human rights protection. These
include cuts to public spending particularly affecting the
most marginalised, the announced closure of State
institutions dedicated to women’s rights and access to
justice, and an instruction from the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs to suspend participation in all events abroad
related to the 2030 Agenda. I urge the authorities to place
human rights at the centre of their policy making, to build
a more cohesive and inclusive society. This also means full
respect for the right to peaceful assembly and freedom of
expression.
Mr. President,
A human rights economy is a
lever for social justice.
It promotes equal
opportunities, meaningful participation, and investment in
essential services.
It helps forge trust in public
institutions, fostering the social contract.
Globally, we
need to bring our economic systems – from trade treaties
to investment agreements, business regulation to development
frameworks – in line with human rights, including the
right to development. This also has consequences for the
reform of the international financial architecture.
Some
promising initiatives are underway, such as the Bridgetown
Initiative, the proposed new Framework Convention on
International Tax Cooperation, the OECD 15 per cent global
minimum tax rate on multinational companies, and the global
2 per cent minimum wealth tax on billionaires, proposed by
Brazil as the current G20 chair. This last measure alone
could generate roughly 300 billion USD per year to combat
climate change, inequalities, and poverty.
I hope these
initiatives are further triggers of the real transformation
that is needed, by working together, to put human rights at
the centre of all economic decision making.
Mr.
President,
Systemic racism against people of African
descent is perpetuated by systems and structures that are
rooted in the legacies of colonialism and enslavement.
It
manifests in many ways. In terms of socio-economic
inequalities. And in the way law enforcement and the
criminal justice system interact with people of African
descent in a discriminatory manner.
Clearly, there is
much to be done, as illustrated by recent reports.
While
countries like Brazil, Colombia and the United States of
America for example are taking important steps to address
racial discrimination, issues remain. Racial profiling, high
unemployment, over-representation and differential treatment
in detention, greater instances of excessive use of lethal
force by law enforcement, disproportionate rates of maternal
mortality, health and housing inequalities, and food
insecurity, persist in these and many other countries around
the world.
In countries in the European Union, the
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights also reported
that discrimination, harassment, violence, and racial
profiling continue to be routine features of life for Black
people.
My Office’s “Agenda towards transformative
change for racial justice and equality” and the
recommendations of UN mechanisms, including the
International Independent Expert Mechanism to advance racial
justice and equality in law enforcement, offer a
comprehensive response to systemic issues. As the
Coordinator of the International Decade for People of
African Descent, I support calls by several States and
others to proclaim a Second International Decade for People
of African Descent starting in 2025.
This Second
International Decade must be informed by the lived
experiences, knowledge and expertise of people of African
descent - to reverse the culture of denial, dismantle
systemic racism in all areas of life, and deliver reparatory
justice for the wrongs of the past.
I urge States also to
draw on the recommendations of the Permanent Forum on People
of African Descent, and other UN anti-racism mechanisms in
this process.
Mr. President,
Tragically, pushbacks on
the rights of women and girls continue.
Active resistance
to gender equality is a key factor in slowing progress –
even reversing gains made – in achieving the Sustainable
Development Goals.
By 2030, women are forecasted to
represent the majority of the extreme poor among those aged
15 and above – an increasing gender poverty gap.
I
deplore the ongoing systemic persecution of women and girls
in Afghanistan, particularly regarding their rights to
education, employment, and freedom of movement. More
broadly, human rights defenders and media workers continue
to be arbitrarily arrested and detained for expressing
opinions perceived as critical of the de facto authorities.
The use of corporal punishment, including mass floggings,
persists, in violation of international law. Attacks by
armed groups against civilians, particularly targeting the
Hazara community, continue.
In the Islamic Republic of
Iran, we continue to receive reports of violent crackdowns,
including widespread arrests, against women and girls for
not wearing the hijab as instructed, as new measures to
enforce the hijab law are implemented. The draft bill
"supporting the Family by Promoting the Culture of Chastity
and Hijab" threatens to impose additional restrictive and
punitive measures on women and girls. More generally, ahead
of the presidential elections, I urge respect for the rights
to freedom of expression and assembly, and protection of
journalists. I also reiterate my call for an immediate
moratorium on the death penalty, given the reported spike in
executions since the beginning of the year.
While I have
mentioned only some more salient examples, and there are
more, let me be clear.
No country is immune from
regression in women’s rights. Everyone must be vigilant
and steadfast in countering this pushback.
And with the
same determination, challenge harmful narratives, embrace
inclusivity and respect the rights and dignity of everyone,
everywhere.
I once again warn of the dangers of
antisemitism, anti-Muslim bigotry, as well as divisive
rhetoric and disinformation that cast migrants and refugees
as the scapegoats for wider challenges in society, including
socio-economic issues. This has become particularly
fashionable among populists and far right extremists in
election campaigns in Europe, North America and
elsewhere.
And a lot more work needs to be done to stem
ongoing discrimination and exclusion on the basis of sexual
orientation and gender identity.
Any form of hate speech
is unacceptable, dangerous for social cohesion and a
harbinger of worse to come.
Mr. President,
Attacks
continue against human rights defenders, journalists, and
others who seek to shed light on violations and abuses, as
do restrictions on civic space. We must do better for their
protection.
According to data from UNESCO, 72 journalists
and media workers were killed in 2023, in large part in
conflict situations.
Data compiled by my Office shows
that at least 42 Indigenous human rights defenders were
killed in 2023 in 11 countries, most of them for defending
the environment, their lands, territories, and resources.
This is almost certainly under-reported.
In Guatemala, I
welcome the Government´s efforts to establish new
mechanisms to strengthen protection of human rights
defenders, journalists, Indigenous leaders, and justice
officials, as they continue to be under attack for having
defended human rights, denounced corruption, and called for
accountability.
In Yemen, however, I am deeply worried
about the well-being of 13 United Nations national staff
who, along with dozens of staff from national and
international NGOs and civil society, have been arbitrarily
detained by the de facto authorities since 6 June. Six of
them, including one woman, are my national staff and have
not had contact with their families, nor has the UN been
able to access them. This is in addition to two UNESCO staff
and two other of my staff who have already been arbitrarily
detained for a lengthy period. The de facto authorities must
immediately and unconditionally release them, and harassment
of their families must stop. I call on all States with
influence to take urgent action to end this
situation.
The situation in Belarus continues to be very
troubling. My Office continues to receive reports of
restrictions on freedoms of assembly, association, and
expression, and persistent impunity. Over 1,300 people
remain imprisoned on politically motivated and vague
charges.
I urge the authorities in Azerbaijan to review,
in line with international human rights law, all cases of
journalists, activists, and other individuals arbitrarily
deprived of their liberty and to ensure their protection
against ill-treatment. All individuals arbitrarily detained
must be immediately released.
A worrying trend in terms
of civic space is the consideration or adoption of so-called
“transparency” or “foreign influence” laws in over
50 countries, including in the Republika Srpska entity of
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, India, Kyrgyzstan, the
Russian Federation, Slovakia and Türkiye. These laws risk
having serious chilling effects on the work of civil
society, freedom of expression and of association.
In
recent months, in Peru, the Congress has advanced a series
of legislative initiatives that could undermine judicial and
electoral independence, reverse important gains on
transitional justice and on women´s political participation
and restrict freedom of association and expression.
In
Mexico, I call on the authorities to ensure accountability
for the violence and killings that occurred during the
electoral period, including of politicians.
I have
continued to engage with China on a range of human rights
issues, including the serious concerns my Office identified
in the Xinjiang region. My Office recently visited Beijing
to discuss, among other things, problematic provisions in
China’s counterterrorism and criminal laws, as well as the
application of national security laws in Hong Kong SAR. My
Office continues to raise individual cases of concern, and I
deplore the heavy sentences given last week to a women’s
rights activist and to a labour rights activist for
exercising their fundamental human rights. I urge the
authorities to release all those arbitrarily detained,
ensure access to information by family members and embark on
legal reform. I acknowledge the dialogue of the authorities
with my Office and hope this will contribute to concrete
improvements in all human rights.
In the Southeast Asia
region, there is a pattern emerging of transnational
repression whereby human rights defenders seeking refuge in
neighbouring countries have been subject to rendition and
refoulement or disappeared and even killed. There are
indications this trend may be becoming a global one and so I
urge all States to have zero tolerance for such actions and
to ensure full accountability of their security
forces.
Mr. President,
I would also like to share with
you some developments on which to build further and which
can give us hope.
First, last year’s commemoration of
the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights demonstrated the strength of our commitment to the
universality and indivisibility of human rights.
Almost
800 pledges were made to advance economic, social, and
cultural rights, the right to development, the right to a
clean, healthy, and sustainable environment, and civil and
political rights.
Many have already been acted
upon.
For instance, 29 treaty ratifications were made by
20 States, with Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Thailand
having fulfilled their Human Rights 75 ratification pledges.
More generally, I welcome recent ratifications of human
rights treaties by Bhutan, Côte d’Ivoire, the Republic of
Congo, South Sudan, and Tuvalu.
Morocco, Paraguay and
Portugal led the launch of the international network of
national mechanisms for implementation, reporting and
follow-up in May, which was their joint Human Rights 75
pledge.
A number of countries advanced new bills or
reformed their comprehensive anti-discrimination laws, in
line with their Human Rights 75 pledges.
Adoption of
legislation against gender-based violence in Dominica and
Saint Lucia is also welcome.
Second, we continue to see a
significant mobilisation of people around the word demanding
change to uphold human rights, equality and justice –
nationally, regionally and globally.
This includes many
young people. It includes people taking extensive personal
risk, and who are up against numerous barriers.
Human
rights provide the solid ground on which such movements can
stand.
Third, the international and regional human rights
systems, despite significant constraints, continue to
deliver for people.
Human rights treaty bodies have been
groundbreaking on many issues, notably on the environment of
late.
Their work is bolstered by that of regional and
international courts and tribunals, such as the recent
ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that States
have justiciable, positive human rights obligations to
protect against the growing risks of climate change.
The
International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea’s Advisory
Opinion on climate change is another example.
It found
that anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions constitute
marine pollution, and that States have a binding obligation
under international law to limit temperature rise to no more
than 1.5°C.
A March 2024 ruling by the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights held a State responsible for violating
the right to a healthy environment and not protecting
against business-related harms to the environment.
Such
Courts have also referenced the contributions of Special
Procedures mandate holders, demonstrating the relevance of
the system.
There are also pending requests for advisory
opinions related to climate change before the ICJ and the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
These efforts give
momentum – demonstrating that when the various pieces of
the regional and global system reinforce each other, change
is possible.
The reforms in law and practice that flow
from the work of these mechanisms may not always make the
headlines, but they are crucial to laying out a clear way
forward.
Fourth, I welcome the increasing commitment of
numerous countries to advancing the human rights agenda:
those countries who, despite geopolitical headwinds, have
reached out to my Office, requesting technical
support.
For example, I recognise the openness of Ecuador
to strengthening my Office’s presence there, and that of
Honduras to working with my Office to address systemic
challenges, ranging from transitional justice initiatives to
land and environmental protection.
I also appreciate the
commitment to establish a UN Human Rights regional office
for the Caribbean Community and a country office in
Mozambique.
Mr. President,
In closing, I need to flag
one overarching concern. We are seeing increasingly
aggressive verbal attacks, threats and reprisals, and
virulent social media campaigns against international
institutions and mechanisms, including the United Nations
generally, my Office, Special Procedures mandate holders,
the International Court of Justice, and the International
Criminal Court.
This is unacceptable. These institutions
were set up and mandated by States precisely to undertake
their crucial work — States must facilitate this work and
protect it from undue interference and attack.
I would
like each of us to think hard about how to ensure that the
achievements of the multilateral system are not undermined
and that we are able to do our job.
States gathered in
this very room last December, fully cognizant of the many
challenges, and recognised that human rights are a pathway
for solutions.
With focus now on the Pact for the Future,
I urge all States to ensure that our common commitment to
human rights is reflected powerfully – and concretely –
in the Summit’s outcomes.
A strong and effective human
rights system is key to effective multilateral cooperation,
and to building a better future for people and planet.
My
Office is ready to play its
part.