HRC46: UN Secretary-General's remarks for the opening of the 46th session of the Human Rights Council
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Statements | OHCHR , UNOG , UNITED NATIONS

HRC46: UN Secretary-General's remarks for the opening of the 46th session of the Human Rights Council

THE SECRETARY-GENERAL VIDEO MESSAGE FOR THE OPENING OF THE 46TH REGULAR SESSION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

[as delivered]

Distinguished President of the Human Rights Council,

Madam High Commissioner,

Excellencies,

Ladies and gentlemen,

Human rights are our bloodline; they connect us to one another, as equals.

Human rights are our lifeline; they are the pathway to resolving tensions and forging lasting peace.

And, human rights are on the frontline; they are the building blocks of a world of dignity and opportunity for all – and they are under fire every day.

The Human Rights Council is the global locus for tackling the full range of human rights challenges.

I thank you for that vital work — and welcome the engagement of Member States and civil society.

One year ago, I came before you to launch a Call to Action for Human Rights.

We named this values-based and dignity-driven appeal “The Highest Aspiration” — drawing from the words of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights itself.

That phrase is a reminder that securing human rights is both essential and a constant work in progress.

Gains can be easily undone.

Perils can strike in any instant.

Mesdames et Messieurs,

Peu de temps après notre rassemblement de l’année dernière, le COVID-19 a déferlé sur la planète.

La pandémie a mis en évidence les liens qui unissent notre grande famille humaine, mais aussi ceux qui relient les droits humains dans toute leur diversité, qu’ils soient civils, culturels, économiques, politiques ou sociaux.

Le COVID-19 a non seulement creusé les fossés qui nous séparent, aggravé les vulnérabilités et renforcé les inégalités, mais aussi ouvert de nouvelles lignes de faille, y compris en termes de droits humains.

Les violations se multiplient pour former un cercle vicieux.

Des centaines de millions de familles ont vu leur vie bouleversée par la perte d’un emploi, par l’accumulation des dettes, par l’effondrement des revenus.

La pandémie a affecté de manière disproportionnée les femmes, les minorités, les personnes âgées, les personnes en situation de handicap, les réfugiés, les migrants et les peuples autochtones.

Des années de progrès en matière d’égalité des genres ont été réduits à néant.

Pour la première fois depuis des décennies, l’extrême pauvreté gagne du terrain.

La jeunesse souffre : leur éducation a été interrompue et nombre d’entre eux n’ont qu’un accès limité aux nouvelles technologies.

L’incapacité d’assurer un accès équitable aux vaccins représente une nouvelle faillite morale.

À eux seuls, dix pays se sont partagés plus de trois quarts des doses de vaccin contre le COVID-19 administrées à ce jour.

L'équité en matière de vaccins représente une étape décisive dans la réalisation des droits humains. Le nationalisme vaccinal nous renvoie en arrière.

Les vaccins doivent être un bien public mondial, accessibles et abordables pour tous.

Le virus s’attaque aussi aux droits politiques et civils et réduit davantage encore les espaces civiques d’expression.

Brandissant la pandémie comme prétexte, les autorités de certains pays ont pris des mesures de sécurité sévères et adopté des mesures d’urgence pour réprimer les voix dissonantes, abolir les libertés les plus fondamentales, faire taire les médias indépendants et entraver le travail des organisations non gouvernementales.

Des défenseurs des droits humains, des journalistes, des avocats, des militants, et même des professionnels de la santé, ont fait l’objet d’arrestations, de poursuites et de mesures d’intimidation et de surveillance pour avoir critiqué les mesures – ou le manque de mesures – prises pour faire face à la pandémie.

Les restrictions liées à la pandémie servent d’excuse pour miner les processus électoraux, affaiblir les voix des opposants et réprimer les critiques.

L’accès à des informations vitales a parfois été entravé, tandis que la désinformation mortelle a été amplifiée, y compris par quelques dirigeants.

Excellencies,

The COVID-19 infodemic has raised alarms more generally about the growing reach of digital platforms and the use and abuse of data.

A vast library of information is being assembled about each of us. Yet we don’t really have the keys to that library.

We don’t know how this information has been collected, by whom or for what purposes.

That data is being used commercially — for advertising, for marketing and for beefing up corporate bottom lines.

Behavior patterns are being commodified and sold like futures contracts.

This has created new business models and entirely new industries that have contributed to an ever-greater concentration of wealth and inequality.

Our data is also being used to shape and manipulate our perceptions, without our ever realizing it.

Governments can exploit that data to control the behavior of their own citizens, violating human rights of individuals or groups.

All of this is not science fiction or a forecast of a 22nd-century dystopia.

It is here and now. And it requires a serious discussion.

We have developed a Roadmap for Digital Cooperation to find a way forward.

And, I urge all Member States to place human rights at the centre of regulatory frameworks and legislation on the development and use of digital technologies.

We need a safe, equitable and open digital future that does not infringe on privacy or dignity.

Excellencies,

Our Human Rights Call to Action is a comprehensive framework to advance our most important work — from sustainable development to climate action, from protecting fundamental freedoms to gender equality, the preservation of civic space and ensuring that digital technology is a force for good.

Today, I come before you with a sense of urgency to do even more to bring our Human Rights Call to Action to life.

I want to focus on two areas where the imperative for action is great — and the scale of the challenge looms large.

First, the blight of racism, discrimination and xenophobia.

And, second, the most pervasive human rights violation of all: gender inequality.

These evils are fed by two of the deepest wells of injustice in our world: the legacy of centuries of colonialism; and the persistence, across the millennia, of patriarchy.

The linkages between racism and gender inequality are also unmistakable. Some of the worst impacts of both are in the overlaps and intersections of discrimination suffered by women from racial and ethnic minority groups.

Stoking the fires of racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Muslim bigotry, violence against some minority Christian communities, homophobia, xenophobia and misogyny is nothing new.

It has just become more overt, easier to achieve, and globalized.

When we allow the denigration of any of us, we set the precedent for the demonization of all of us.

Excellencies,

The rot of racism eats away at institutions, social structures and everyday life — sometimes invisibly and insidiously.

I welcome the new awakening in the global fight for racial justice, a surge of resistance against being reduced or ignored —often led by women and young people.

As they have highlighted, we have a long way to go.

I commend the Human Rights Council decision to report on systemic racism, accountability and redress, and responses to peaceful anti-racism protests — and look forward to concrete action.

We must also step up the fight against resurgent neo-Nazism, white supremacy and racially and ethnically motivated terrorism.

The danger of these hate-driven movements is growing by the day.

Let us call them what they are:

White supremacy and neo-Nazi movements are more than domestic terror threats.

They are becoming a transnational threat.

These and other groups have exploited the pandemic to boost their ranks through social polarization and political and cultural manipulation.

Today, these extremist movements represent the number one internal security threat in several countries.

Individuals and groups are engaged in a feeding frenzy of hate — fundraising, recruiting and communicating online both at home and overseas, travelling internationally to train together and network their hateful ideologies.

Far too often, these hate groups are cheered on by people in positions of responsibility in ways that were considered unimaginable not long ago.

We need global coordinated action to defeat this grave and growing danger.

Excellencies,

We must also place a special focus on safeguarding the rights of minority communities, many of whom are under threat around the world.

Minority communities are part of the richness of our cultural and social fabric.

Just as biodiversity is fundamental to human well-being, the diversity of communities is fundamental to humanity.

Yet we see not only forms of discrimination but also policies of assimilation that seek to wipe out the cultural and religious identity of minority communities.

When a minority community’s culture, language or faith are under attack, all of us are diminished.

When authorities cast suspicion on entire groups under the guise of security, all of us are threatened.

These measures are doomed to backfire.

We must continue to push for policies that fully respect human rights and religious, cultural and unique human identity.

And we must simultaneously nurture the conditions for each community to feel that they are fully part of society as a whole.

Mesdames et Messieurs les représentants,

Aucune atteinte aux droits humains n’est plus répandue que l’inégalité de genre.

La pandémie de COVID-19 a encore exacerbé la discrimination tenace à l’égard des femmes et des filles.

La crise a un visage féminin.

En effet, la plupart des travailleurs en première ligne sont des femmes, dont beaucoup appartiennent à des groupes ethniques et raciaux marginalisés et se situent au bas de l’échelle économique.

Le fardeau accru des soins à domicile est principalement assumé par les femmes.

La violence à l’égard des femmes et des filles a explosé sous toutes ses formes, des agressions en ligne à la violence domestique, en passant par la traite, l’exploitation sexuelle et le mariage d’enfants.

Les femmes sont proportionnellement plus touchées par les pertes d’emploi et ont été précipitées dans la pauvreté en plus grand nombre.

Cela vient aggraver une situation socioéconomique déjà fragile en raison de leurs revenus inférieurs, de l’écart salarial, de l’inégalité des chances et d’un accès réduit aux ressources et aux mesures de protection.

Rien de tout cela n’est dû au hasard.

Il s’agit là du résultat de générations d’exclusion.

Et, en définitive, d’une question de pouvoir.

Un monde et une culture dominés par les hommes donneront des résultats dominés par les hommes.

Dans le même temps, la réponse au COVID-19 a mis en évidence le pouvoir et l’efficacité du leadership des femmes.

La vie des femmes est peut-être l’un des baromètres les plus précis de la santé de la société dans son ensemble.

La façon dont la société traite la moitié de sa population est révélatrice de la façon dont elle traitera les autres. Nos droits sont indissociablement liés.

En tant que féministe, et fier de l’être, j’ai donc honoré mon engagement de faire de la parité des genres une réalité au sein de la haute direction de l’ONU.

Et j’ai fait de l’égalité des genres l’une des principales priorités de l’ensemble de l’Organisation.

Cette responsabilité ne relève pas d’une seule personne ou d’une seule entité. Si nous voulons être une organisation internationale inclusive, crédible et efficace, nous devons toutes et tous y contribuer.

Je suis déterminé à en faire beaucoup plus.

Notre Appel à l’action en faveur des droits humains vise en particulier à abroger toutes les lois discriminatoires dans le monde et à assurer aux femmes l’égalité en droit en matière de participation et de représentation, dans chaque secteur et à chaque niveau, par des initiatives ambitieuses, notamment des mesures temporaires spéciales comme les quotas.

La réalisation de ce droit sera bénéfique pour nous tous.

Les problèmes qui ont été créés par les hommes – je dis bien par les hommes – ne pourront être réglés que par l’humanité tout entière.

Mais ces solutions ne pourront être trouvées que dans le cadre d’un partage du pouvoir et de la prise des décisions et du respect du droit de chacune et de chacun d’y participer sur un pied d’égalité.

Excellencies,

Every corner of the globe is suffering from the sickness of violations of human rights.

Of course, there are a number of extremely concerning country situations — some of them very prolonged – and this is where the Human Rights Council and its mechanisms are so vital in raising awareness, protecting people, maintaining dialogue and finding solutions.

I thank the Human Rights Council for your recent and timely focus on a situation where the challenges that I outlined today are dramatically evident — and that is the case of Myanmar.

We see the undermining of democracy, the use of brutal force, arbitrary arrests, repression in all its manifestations. Restrictions of civic space. Attacks on civil society. Serious violations against minorities with no accountability, including what has rightly been called ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya population. The list goes on.

It is all coming together in a perfect storm of upheaval.

Today, I call on the Myanmar military to stop the repression immediately. Release the prisoners. End the violence. Respect human rights, and the will of the people expressed in recent elections.

Coups have no place in our modern world.

I welcome the resolution of the Human Rights Council, pledge to implement your request, and express my full support to the people of Myanmar in their pursuit of democracy, peace, human rights and the rule of law.

Excellencies,

People around the world are relying on us to secure and protect their rights.

With the pandemic shining a spotlight on human rights, recovery gives us an opportunity to generate momentum for transformation.

Now is the time to reset. To reshape. To rebuild. To recover better, guided by human rights and human dignity for all.

I am convinced it is possible – if we are determined and if we work together.

Thank you.

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