HRC57 - HC Türk Global Update
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HRC57 Opening - HC Türk Global Update

Global Update by Volker Türk, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, to the Human Rights Council on the opening of its 57th session.

Please, see the attached PDF document for the High Commissioner global update statement, as delivered.

Global Update by Volker Türk, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, to the Human Rights Council on the opening of its 57th session which will last until 11 October 2024.

 

Teleprompter
Mr President. Excellence is distinguished delegates
Next month
will mark two years. Since I took up my position as High Commissioner
for this global update,
I would therefore like to depart from
the usual listing of various country situations
and offer some broader reflections about the state of human rights. Today,
at the midway point of my mandate,
it seems to me
we are
at a fork in the road.
We can either continue on our current path a
treacherous new normal
and sleepwalk into a dystopian future.
Or we can wake up and turn things around for the better
for humanity and the planet.
The new normal cannot be endless, vicious military escalation
and increasingly horrifying,
technologically advanced methods of warfare, control and repression.
The new normal cannot be continued indifference
to deepening inequalities between
and within states.
It cannot be the free for all spread of disinformation,
smothering facts
and the ability to make free and informed choices.
Heated rhetoric
and simplistic fixes,
erasing context, nuance
and empathy,
paving the way for hate speech
and the dire consequences that will inevitably follow
the new normal cannot mean
accepting the injustice driven by creed that
the triple planetary crisis affects those who are the least responsible the most,
or
that sustainable development remains elusive for so many.
The new normal cannot be that national sovereignty is twisted
to shroud
or excuse horrific violations
or
the discrediting of multilateral institutions
or attempts to rewrite the international rules,
chipping away at universally agreed norms.
This cannot be
the world we want
as individuals,
for our families and loved ones,
for our societies and for our global community and future generations.
We can
and must make a different choice,
reconnect
with our common humanity, nature and our planet.
In other words,
we could choose to be guided by human rights
and the universal values that we all share.
Mr. President. Human rights
is human rights are not in crisis,
but political leadership needed to make them
a reality is
in every region around the world.
We see deep seated power dynamics at play to grab or
hold on to power at the expense of universal human rights.
Despite some important advancements 30 years
after the universal commitments on women's rights in Beijing,
the shadow of patriarchy still looms large.
We are seeing alarming regressions on gender equality issues
that we thought had been settled years ago.
At the most extreme, for example,
in Afghanistan,
despicable laws and policies are effectively erasing women from public life.
But everywhere,
insidiously
hate
and subtle
and at sometimes not so subtle misogyny, online and offline are almost normalised.
Women experience higher poverty rates than men in most parts of the world.
Gender based violence, including intimate partner violence,
is devastatingly frequent
and remains largely hidden.
Justice for victims and prevention efforts are woefully inadequate
in stark contradiction with the promise that all
human beings are born free and equal.
Racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance continue to plague
societies propped up by entrenched power structures,
vested interests,
institutional inertia and harmful stereotypes often rooted in legacies of
colonialism and enslavement.
Despite some progress,
it remains uneven and insufficient.
In far too many states across all regions,
we see as a result deepening socio-economic inequalities.
There is also a dearth
of data driven policies which are crucial for transparency and accountability.
To address these phenomena
later this session,
I will present my report on systemic racism and multiple and intersecting
forms of discrimination faced by Africans and people of African descent.
Then
there are those politicians
amplified by some media outlets
who scapegoat
migrants, refugees and minorities. As we have seen, for example,
around electoral periods in Austria, France, Germany, Hungary,
the United Kingdom
and the United States of America, to name a few.
They capitalise on anxiety and despair,
pitting one group against the other,
and they seek to distract and divide.
History has shown us
that hateful words
can trigger hateful actions.
Political leadership, grounded in human rights and evidence based debate
are the antidote to all of this.
This is the only way to tackle the real challenges that people face
in areas such as health, housing, employment
and social protection.
Despite the significant and welcome global shift
towards decriminalisation of consensual same sex relations,
we see a spate of laws being adopted to
establish or expand criminal sanctions in some countries,
such as in Ghana, Indonesia, Iraq
and Uganda. Contrary to the basic universal norms which states have agreed
at the end,
such policies harm societies as a whole, leaving people behind
Mr President on the death penalty.
The overall positive trend towards its abolition worldwide is marred
by a substantial increase in executions in a limited number of states,
such as the Islamic Republic of Iran, particularly for drug related crimes,
but also Saudi Arabia.
This has resulted in a steady increase in the
number of people known to have been executed worldwide.
It will be important to tackle this head on
and to provide the evidence and policy arguments
so that this trend can be reversed again.
Societies are by nature
in constant evolution.
But rather than embracing this creatively,
we see attempts to muzzle freedoms of expression,
assembly and association and a free press,
including in electoral contexts.
Such freedoms are, however, crucial
for critical debate to bring out the best in societies and to find solutions to the
manifold problems we face.
Examples include detention of journalists in Azerbaijan,
arrests, detention and harassment of political opponents in Mali,
Uganda and Venezuela.
Arrests and detention of political opponents and activists in Tunisia,
persecution of political opponents and journalists in Nicaragua,
and crackdowns on activists in Vietnam.
In China, undue restrictions on civic space
continue to be imposed in the name of national security and social stability.
Mr President,
state capture in its various forms is an abuse of power
with serious consequences for human rights,
powerful economic and political actors take control
of what should be independent state institutions,
such as the judiciary or electoral commissions.
They silence critical voices and plunder resources purely for their own political
and financial gain.
We see this, for example,
in Guatemala,
where the criminal law and its processes are abused by some official actors,
such as the attorney general,
to pressure and persecute those involved in defending human rights
and promoting accountability.
In some instances,
segments of the private sector engage in the illegal trade
of a nation's resources to the detriment of the country's development
and its population as widely reported, for example,
in the Central African Republic
or Eastern
Democratic Republic of Congo,
it is also an endemic problem
in Latin America, including in Brazil and Peru.
Mr. President, I also wish to warn about newer forms of power
wielded on people's lives
and on our global public square through
improperly or insufficiently regulated digital technologies.
This also includes the wholesale exploitation of our data.
Human rights, including protecting free expression and privacy,
must be front and centre in efforts to regulate
digital technologies while helping ensure that online violence,
disinformation, hate speech and incitement to hatred are stopped in their tracks.
We must actively ensure that the benefits of
of technological
digital
technologies and artificial intelligence are accessible to those most in need
to help reduce global inequalities and close digital divides.
The global digital compact that is currently being finalised in New York,
therefore needs to be anchored firmly in the normative human rights framework.
Mr.
President,
I have been speaking about the negative impact on people's
rights of entrenched power structures and the misuse of power,
and yet movements
such as those against apartheid racism for
women's rights for environmental rights too.
And many others have shown us how human
rights can trigger positive change in society,
steering us to greater justice and stability.
Human rights are regulators and correctors of power dynamics gone awry.
Recently in Bangladesh, for example,
the student movement carried human rights
as its torch.
The country now has an opportunity to chart a new future,
with the interim government making publicly clear its commitment to a peaceful
and inclusive process grounded in human rights and the rule of law.
My office is supporting the authorities,
including by conducting an independent fact finding mission
into recent alleged human rights violations
and an accountability processes of reconciliation and healing
and other essential, long delayed reforms.
More broadly,
with some elections already having taken place and others still to come this year,
I urge all voters to keep in mind
the issues that matter most to them, be it a home
education
for their Children,
their health or job justice, their family and loved ones.
The environment to be free from violence, tackling corruption
being heard. These are all human rights issues.
I urge voters to ask themselves which of the political platforms
or candidates will work for the human rights of everyone,
which will promote equality of opportunity
and strive to foster economies that offer decent work for decent pay.
Which of the political parties have human
rights and solidarity as part of their vision
rather than undermining them?
And I urge all voters to be vigilant.
Be wary of the shrill voices the strongman types
that throw glitter
in our eyes, offering illusory
solutions that deny reality.
As I said earlier,
know
that one. When one group is singled out as a scapegoat for society's ills,
one day your own might be next.
Mr President. 75 years ago,
states adopted the four Geneva conventions,
elaborating laws of war
that they agreed to uphold in the wake of
the horrors and devastation of two world wars.
And almost 80 years ago,
they adopted the United Nations Charter, promising, I quote,
to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.
And yet here we are,
with a crossing of innumerable red lines or readiness to tow right up to them.
Almost two years ago in Sudan,
where I undertook my first visit as high commissioner,
there was hope.
Today,
the country is experiencing one of the
world's worst humanitarian and protection crises,
fueled by long standing impunity, a
firestorm of
zero
power struggles, competing economic interests and instrumental
of ethnic tensions.
Estimates suggest that over 20,000 people have been killed.
The world cannot let this continue.
We know
that wars spill over
and into future generations, fostering repeated cycles of hatred
if their causes remain unaddressed.
Sadly,
the war in Gaza is the quintessential example.
Since the horrific 7 October attacks claimed
the lives of over 1200 victims in Israel
and injured many others,
over 40,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces,
several 1000 injured
and thousands remain under the rubble in Gaza
each day Palestinians struggle to survive.
Nearly 1.9 million people have been forcibly displaced across the strip,
many multiple times.
11 months on
101 Israeli hostages are still held to be in Gaza,
while the actual number is likely higher.
Almost 10,000 Palestinians are held in Israeli prisons
or ad hoc military facilities,
many arbitrarily with over 50 people having
died due to inhumane conditions and ill treatment
in the West Bank.
Deadly and destructive operations,
some at a scale not witnessed in the last two decades, are worsening
a
calamitous situation. They are already aggravated by serious settler violence.
Ending the war and averting a full blown
regional conflict is an absolute and urgent priority.
Equally,
the wider situation of illegality across the occupied Palestinian territory,
deriving from Israel's policies and practises are so clearly spelled
out by the International Court of Justice in its advisory,
opinion in July
must be comprehensively addressed.
States must not
and cannot accept blatant disregard for international law,
including binding decisions of the Security Council
and orders of the International Court of Justice. Neither in this
nor any other situation
in Ukraine,
civilians are trapped in cycles of terror
through ongoing attacks by the Russian Federation,
striking civilian facilities like hospitals, schools and supermarkets,
and repeated waves of targeting of
energy infrastructure leading to countrywide blackouts.
I fear for Ukrainians this coming winter,
troubled by the impact of the recent escalations on civilians, including in
Kursk.
My office has pursued access to all affected areas
to be able to monitor the human rights situation.
I regret
the Russian Federation has so far declined to grant such access to relevant areas.
Myanmar's
crisis continues to plumb the depths of inhumanity with recent air strikes,
mass arrests and reports of extrajudicial killings continuing unabated
with some of the highest numbers of civilian casualties.
Amidst stifling impunity, civilians are paying the heaviest price
and we have seen the highest number of civilian
casualties reported since the current crisis began in 2021
and the Rohingya community violently cornered in northern Rakhine
state with nowhere safe to turn
in Many of these situations, even minimal humanitarian aid
to civilians is instrumental,
diverted or indeed blocked altogether,
as is access for human rights monitors.
For those of us engaged in these works,
it is as if We are standing
on the banks of a river, watching people drown with life buoys piled at our feet.
In other cases, violence is directed at the human rights at the
at
the human rights and humanitarian system.
As with the outrageous detention of UN staff in Yemen,
UN staff and humanitarian workers must never be targeted.
I will provide dedicated updates on many of
these and other situations later this session.
Excellencies
States themselves have designed international human rights and humanitarian law
to preserve and guarantee our common humanity.
These norms are our mainstay against unbridled power,
all parties to conflicts and other states,
particularly those with influence,
must do everything they can put an end to violations.
One concrete action would be for states in
line with their obligations under the Geneva Conventions
and human rights due diligence,
to refrain from exporting or transferring arms to a party to an armed conflict
where there is a real risk
that they would be used in breach of international humanitarian law.
I am encouraged that some states have already taken steps in this direction,
Mr President, Human rights
work is crucial to peace
to preventing conflict in the first place
to providing early warning signals when conflict is likely to erupt.
To establishing objective, reliable facts of what has happened in the fog of war,
with a view to achieving truth
and justice for every victim
the day after,
and to ensuring peace negotiations are inclusive
and acceptable to all parties and therefore truly sustainable
peace. Accords throughout the 19 nineties
from countries in the former
Yugoslavia to Guatemala and Cambodia
showed the value of integrating human rights
in Liberia too.
Human rights principles were transformative in peace processes,
particularly promoting women's participation.
My office was directly involved in negotiations
of the 2016 peace agreement in Colombia
and we are still present in the country
to help integrate the human rights dimension,
most recently to provide, for example, guidance
on dismantling criminal organisations and
supporting transitional justice institutions.
I also welcome the progress Nepal is making to establish
the transitional justice bodies envisaged in the 2006 peace accords.
We also must unite in support of justice nationally and globally,
the watershed moments of the Nuremberg trials
and the judgments of the
ICTY and
ICTR
in Sierra Leone and Cambodia before the ICC and national courts
by dint of universal jurisdiction are clear messages to perpetrators.
Once you have committed this type of crime,
there is always the risk of accountability becoming personal.
A clear and comprehensive framework
is key here
and it's a normative framework.
I therefore welcome the current efforts of states
to fill a gap
in that existing structure and to advance negotiations on a
convention on the prevention and punishment of crimes against Humanity.
Mr. President. Instability at home
fuels global instability
Conversely,
solidarity and cohesion within countries form
a solid foundation for international co-operation.
As states acknowledged in the Vienna Declaration Programme of Action in 93.
The promotion and protection of all human rights
is a legitimate concern of the international community.
As High Commissioner, I remain committed to advancing a vision of human rights
for the 21st century that is solution oriented, forward looking and unifying,
and that speaks to every human being directly
international.
Cooper operation grounded in human rights is the channel we have to
affect change and to address the massive challenges of our time.
Multilateral institutions, including the international human rights system,
are at the disposal of the international community
to enable dialogue with greater representativeness
to address the roots of mistrust and to facilitate progress
and importantly to be the voice of reason based
on evidence and facts in our turbulent times,
developing much needed longer term thinking
and providing concrete solutions to concrete problems.
It is therefore pivotal
fully to embrace the opportunities offered by the human rights ecosystem,
including my office,
and to ensure that human rights are bolstered
and strongly integrated
in the upcoming pact for the future.
This is a plea
I make to each and every one of you to each of your delegations
here today at this critical juncture of the negotiations,
you have built this formidable normative architecture
in larger freedom
and for good reason,
use and reinforce it in good faith and with humility,
since nothing can be taken for granted.
Mister President,
going forward,
I like to be transparent about my approach to my mandate
about the challenges and the opportunities
I believe in engagement frank exchanges and keeping dialogue open
even more so in the face of fierce disagreement,
we need to overcome absolutist approaches,
the US versus them mentality and the lack of nuances.
The world is far too complex.
It is my duty to speak out publicly whenever necessary
to achieve the greatest positive impact.
Human rights are meant to challenge our own assumptions
and identify the blind spots. They are meant to encourage self critical reflection
because no one is perfect.
Selectivity and inconsistent standards serve no one,
and certainly not victims of human rights violations.
The argument that we should only focus on the biggest crisis of the day
doesn't hold for the human rights cause
because human rights
begin. And I quote from Eleanor Roosevelt
in small places close to home,
and human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent.
It is important for me to understand when and
why some states resist engaging meaningfully with my office
and some only come to us when they have a problem elsewhere.
So it will remain my priority to assure all
states of the value of engaging with my office
and the
and the human rights system as a whole, not for engagement's sake,
but to achieve tangible progress.
Internally, we have devoted considerable time
to designing an organisational plan to make UN human rights more effective
and responsive, fit for purpose
to deliver on the many expectations you have of us.
and the requests for assistance, support and advice that we receive.
We need your active funding and strategic and
political support to help us implement it.
Governments and other actors will not always like what we have to say
that is inherent in the very nature of human rights.
But I urge you not to kill the messenger
and instead to focus on furthering our fundamental common objective
the promotion and protection
of human rights for everyone everywhere.
My office will continue to work tirelessly in support of victims everywhere.
I urge you all to make use of this institution to the fullest
because a strong UN human rights office and a healthy,
well resourced human rights ecosystem are of global interest and benefit.
And they represent an extraordinary return on investment at a
tiny fraction of the resources so readily devoted elsewhere.
Collectively, we should make the choice
of rejecting the new normal
and the dystopian future it would present.
Let us embrace and trust the full power of human rights
as the path to the world. We want
more peaceful, just
fair
and sustainable.
Thank you very much.