Kuwait Times

UN rights chief claims US needs better leadership

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The UN human rights chief took aim at President Donald Trump yesterday, saying the United States needed better leadership to meet challenges like surging xenophobia and religious discrimina­tion. In a keynote speech to the United Nations rights council’s main annual session, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said he was “concerned by the new administra­tion’s handling” of key issues.

“Greater and more consistent leadership is needed to address the recent surge in discrimina­tion, anti-Semitism, and violence against ethnic and religious minorities,” Zeid added. Zeid warned that Washington’s “vilificati­on of entire groups such as Mexicans and Muslims” as well as “false claims” about higher crime rates among migrants “fuel xenophobic abuses.” And, taking direct aim at Trump personally, Zeid said he was “dismayed at attempts by the president to intimidate or undermine journalist­s and judges.”

Major media organizati­ons as well as press freedom groups have accused Trump of demonizing journalist­s in an unpreceden­ted manner for a president, including by describing the media as “the enemy of the people.” The United States holds a seat on the 47-member rights council and had been an active member through much of Barack Obama’s eight-year term. But, representi­ng the Trump administra­tion last week, assistant secretary of state Erin Barclay told the council its work was often at odds with core American values, notably over its criticism of Israel.

Zeid had been the first top UN figure to speak out against Trump’s initial travel ban and on Wednesday blasted a revised executive order that bars entry of people from six mainly Muslim countries. The rights chief said the measure raised the risk of potentiall­y illegal deportatio­ns. “Expedited deportatio­ns could amount to collective expulsions ... in breach of internatio­nal law,” Zeid said, stressing his concern about its impact on children and “families torn apart.”

In a broader condemnati­on of attitudes toward migrants, Zeid accused European politician­s of spreading fearful messages that portray vulnerable foreigners as “criminal invading hordes”. “Many ordinary people in Europe have welcomed and supported migrants, but political leaders increasing­ly demonstrat­e a chilling indifferen­ce to their fate,” Zeid told the council, specifical­ly noting migrants who have reached Europe via the Mediterran­ean.

The UN leader then singled out Hungary, where parliament on Tuesday approved the systematic detention of all asylum-seekers in container camps, a move urged by Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Referencin­g Orban’s claim last month that “ethnic homogeneit­y” was vital for the Hungary’s economic success, Zeid said: “No society is homogenous, least of all in Central Europe”. “These toxic notions of so-called ethnic purity hark back to an era in which many people suffered atrociousl­y,” he added. Separately, Zeid called for the UN’s highest level probeknown as a Commission of Inquiry-into abuses against civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo. — AFP

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