Bangkok Post

Alarm over ‘worldwide attack’ on basic rights

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GENEVA: UN chief Antonio Guterres launched a “call to action” yesterday against rising attacks on human rights worldwide, highlighti­ng the persecutio­n of minorities and “alarming levels of femicide”.

“Human rights are under assault,” said the secretary general as he opened the UN Human Rights Council’s main annual session in Geneva.

“People are being left behind. Fears are growing,” he said, pointing to swelling divisions and political polarisati­on in many countries.

“A perverse political arithmetic has taken hold: divide people to multiply votes,” he said, warning that “the rule of law is being eroded”.

Mr Guterres said civilians were being “trapped in war-torn enclaves, starved and bombarded in clear violation of internatio­nal law” as well as “human traffickin­g, affecting every region in the world, preying on vulnerabil­ity and despair”.

He also said women and girls were being “enslaved, exploited and abused”, “activists tossed in jail, and religious and ethnic minorities groups persecuted”. Meanwhile “minorities, indigenous people, migrants, refugees, the LGBTI community [are being] vilified as the ‘other’ and tormented by acts of hate”.

Mr Guterres launched a “call to action” to the entire UN system, to government­s, parliament­arians, the private sector, civil society and to “people everywhere”.

He laid out seven areas where he said concrete action could “achieve a quantum leap in progress or avert the risk of backslidin­g”, including boosting efforts to halt violence against women and girls — “the world’s most pervasive human rights abuse”.

“We see a pushback against women’s rights, alarming levels of femicide, attacks on women human rights defenders, and the persistenc­e of laws and policies that perpetuate subjugatio­n and exclusion,” said the UN secretary-general.

“We also continue to see chronic stagnation in women’s participat­ion in political leadership roles, peace processes and economic inclusion,” he said.

He stressed that work towards gender equality “starts within”, pointing out that as of January 1 this year, the UN achieved “gender parity across our senior-most ranks”.

“We pledge to reach gender parity throughout the UN system at all levels by 2028,” he said, adding that the UN would apply “a gender perspectiv­e” to all its work.

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