Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Killings of human rights defenders 'go largely unnoticed by outside world'

Hundreds of human rights defenders are killed every year, many of them with impunity, according to a new UN report. Those involved in issues of environmen­t and rights of indigenous peoples are particular­ly vulnerable.

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UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders Mary Lawlor on Thursday presents her report on the situation of human rights defenders.

"Hundreds of Human Rights Defenders are being killed every year, and there is little sign that this is going to stop. We also know that many of these murders are signaled in advance with threats," the Special Rapporteur told DW. Those threats can be direct or indirect, targeted at individual­s or more general, according to the report. They "are often intended to intimidate, silence and stop human rights defenders from carrying out their work. There is no more direct attack on civil society space than the killing of human rights defenders," the report reads.

According to the Special Rapporteur, the problem is "widespread." Since 2015, a total of 1,323 human rights defenders have been killed and at least 281 were killed in 2019 alone, the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights (OHCHR) found. The killings were committed in 64 countries worldwide, a third of UN member states.

Latin America is consistent­ly the most affected region. In 2019, half of the killings of human rights defenders targeted those who had been involved in issues of land and environmen­t as well as rights of indigenous peoples and other minorities. "This is partly because those working on those issues are in isolated, remote locations, far from the protective gaze of internatio­nal media or embassies in major cities," Mary Lawlor explained to DW. "These defenders are often regarded as especially soft targets, whose deaths will go largely unnoticed by the outside world."

On improving the situation of human rights defenders (HRD), the Special Rapporteur criticized the lack of political will to prevent the murders: "The crisis in HRD murders predates the pandemic, and is fueled in a major way by impunity. If states found the political will to properly investigat­e the killings, prosecute the crimes and hold the perpetrato­rs to account, it would deter future murders," she told DW, adding

that "we see very few of those responsibl­e ever being held to account."

In her report, the Special Rapporteur concludes that states should respond "more effectivel­y to threats against human rights defenders," with interventi­ons including "taking action to stop vilificati­on and threats aimed at defenders, which make them more vulnerable to attacks."

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 ??  ?? Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders
Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders

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