Summary:
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Mr. Guterres noted that hundreds of cases of conflict-related sexual abuse against men, women, and children had been reported in Ukraine in the previous year, in addition to the “awful suffering” brought on by the repeated shelling of Ukrainian cities and critical infrastructure.
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Mr. Guterres emphasised the importance of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which the international community adopted 75 years ago to prevent a repeat of the Second World War.
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“The UN head emphasised that now was the time to “stand up for the human rights of everyone, everywhere,” leading a call to “stand on the right side of history.”
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The UN’s rights chief urges nationsKurt Türk, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said all countries should follow the Universal Declaration.
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He also said that people’s fundamental rights are better understood than ever.
Speaking just days after the UN General Assembly passed a resolution demanding that Russian soldiers leave Ukraine right now, the UN head emphasized that Russia’s decision to declare war on its neighbour on February 24, 2022, had resulted in “widespread death, damage, and displacement.”
The UN General Assembly President, Csaba Krösi, who was also present at the start of the 52nd session of the Geneva-based Council, gave a stern warning that Russia’s actions had “effectively paralyzed” the Security Council in New York, the main international body charged with upholding peace and security.
He claimed that the Security Council, like the General Assembly, was at a turning point.
According to Mr. Krösi, many nations are still working to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, and more than 70 of them are in financial difficulty as a result of the world’s rising cost of living. In many of these nations, women and girls are also “systematically excluded.”
The General Assembly President stated that nothing less than a fundamental shift in the global response was required in the face of such “unprecedented…interlocking” challenges, particularly when it came to combating climate change, which is already an existential threat for many people.
Abuse in Ukraine has been confirmed.
Mr. Guterres noted that hundreds of cases of conflict-related sexual abuse against men, women, and children had been reported in Ukraine in the previous year, in addition to the “awful suffering” brought on by the repeated shelling of Ukrainian cities and critical infrastructure.
The UN Secretary-General informed the member states of the Human Rights Council as they gathered in Geneva for an unprecedented marathon, a nearly six-week session that “serious violations of international humanitarian and human rights law against prisoners of war and hundreds of cases of enforced disappearances and arbitrary detention of civilians” had been discovered in the previous year.
On March 20, the Independent International Commission of Investigation on Ukraine will update the 47 Member States of the Human Rights Council as part of its regularly scheduled activities.
As the Member States passed a resolution on the state of Ukraine’s human rights in light of Russian aggression, the investigation was launched in March last year. The three commissioners’ work complements that of the current UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU), which, among other things, collects accounts of potential war crimes.