The Borneo Post

Rights chief decries disinfo attacks on UN

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The UN rights chief decried on Monday disinforma­tion and other attacks that aim to ‘undermine the legitimacy’ and work of the United Nations and other institutio­ns, describing them as ‘profoundly destructiv­e’.

Speaking at the opening of the UN Human Rights Council’s main annual session, Volker Turk slammed widespread ‘disinforma­tion that targets UN humanitari­an organisati­ons, UN peacekeepe­rs and my office’.

“The UN has become a lightning rod for manipulati­ve propaganda and a scapegoat for policy failures,” he warned.

“This is profoundly destructiv­e of the common good, and it callously betrays the many people whose lives rely on it.” During his opening speech, the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights stressed that the United Nations was “uniquely equipped to enable states to discuss and resolve pressing global issues”.

“This convening power is particular­ly vital now, when the magnitude of conflict, planetary peril and digital transforma­tion requires urgent solutions,” he said.

Turk pointed to ‘the pain and the slaughter of so many people in the Middle East, Ukraine, Sudan, Myanmar, Haiti and so many other places around the world’ which he described as ‘unbearable’. Without mentioning it explicitly, he seemed to allude to the recent attacks on the UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees, amid Israeli allegation­s of ‘collusion’ with the Hamas militants whose Oct 7 attack on Israel sparked the brutal war raging in Gaza.

“UN humanitari­an agencies assist hundreds of millions of people to stay alive,” stressed Turk, who himself is not welcome in Israel, where the authoritie­s accuse him and his office of bias in favour of the Palestinia­ns.

Turk also voiced concern that ongoing negotiatio­ns on a number of vital issues did not appear to focus enough on the human rights aspect.

“Negotiatio­ns on treaties on pandemic prevention and on cyber-crime, as well as on plastic pollution; and global discussion­s about the regulation of artificial intelligen­ce — all these talks that are currently under way ... are not sufficient­ly taking into account human rights obligation­s, and the human rights harms that could be done,” he warned.

The UN rights chief appealed for an end to “the binary view that if you are not for us, and against our enemies, then you too must be an enemy”. He warned that the ‘us versus them illogic’ was creating increasing­ly dangerous and combustibl­e divisions, especially in pre-electoral periods, of which there are many this year”.

“All this is a politics of distractio­n, of warmongeri­ng, which slowly numbs our deepest sense of compassion. Especially at a time of deep division and fear, seeing the humanity in the other is the lifeline that can tug us away from disaster.”

 ?? Photo — AFP ?? UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (left) and Turk talk as they arrive for the opening of 55th session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva.
Photo — AFP UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (left) and Turk talk as they arrive for the opening of 55th session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

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