Jamaica Gleaner

UN chief demands that the world step up to stamp out hatred

- UNITED NATIONS (AP) :

UN SECRETARY General António Guterres demanded Monday that the world “step up to stamp out anti-Semitism, anti-Muslim hatred, persecutio­n of Christians and all other forms of racism, xenophobia, discrimina­tion and incitement”.

The United Nations (UN) chief said he was responding to incidents “that have become all too familiar — Muslims gunned down in mosques and their religious sites vandalised; Jews murdered in synagogues, their gravestone­s defaced with swastikas; Christians killed at prayer, their churches often torched”.

Guterres cited the most recent incidents: Saturday’s shootings at a synagogue in California that killed one woman and Sunday’s attack on a Christian church in Burkina Faso that killed the pastor and five others.

Beyond the murders of worshipper­s, he said, “there is loathsome rhetoric” aimed not only at religious groups, but at migrants and refugees, as well as “assertions of white supremacy, a resurgence of neo-Nazi ideology (and) venom directed at anyone considered the ‘other”.

Guterres said “parts of the Internet are becoming hothouses of hate, as like-minded bigots find each other online, and platforms serve to inflame and enable hate to go viral”.

The secretary general has been speaking out against hatred and intoleranc­e for months as well as rising polarisati­on and populism within nations, ebbing cooperatio­n among them, and “fragile” trust in internatio­nal institutio­ns. And, he has said, “democratic principles are under siege”.

But this statement was his strongest call for global action in the face of escalating deadly attacks — including on mosques in New Zealand and churches in Sri Lanka that caused mass casualties.

The secretary general said he has launched two urgent initiative­s to devise “a plan of action to fully mobilise the United Nations system’s response to tackling hate speech” and to see what the UN can contribute to ensure the safety of religious sanctuarie­s.

The initiative on hate speech is being led by his special envoy on preventing genocide, and the initiative on safety for religious sanctuarie­s is being led by the head of the UN Alliance of Civilizati­ons.

“Hatred is a threat to everyone — and so this is a job for everyone,” Guterres said in a statement.

But he said political and religious leaders “have a special responsibi­lity to promote peaceful coexistenc­e.

“I will count on the strong support of government­s, civil society and other partners in working together to uphold the values that bind us as a single human family,” he said.

 ?? AP ?? Secretary-General of the United Nations António Guterres.
AP Secretary-General of the United Nations António Guterres.

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