Human rights are under assault globally, says UN Secretary General
UN chief Antonio Guterres warns of deliberate global rights erosion amid conflicts, funding cuts, and rising inequality, urging urgent action to protect vulnerable groups and uphold international law.
- At the Human Rights Council opening in Geneva, Guterres warned human rights are under attack globally and said `This assault is not coming from the shadows. It is happening in plain sight—and often led by those who hold the greatest power`.
- Guterres blamed political choices and donor shifts, citing US President Donald Trump's 2025 aid cuts and other major donors' follow suit, weakening rights enforcement.
- Across conflicts from Sudan to Myanmar, Guterres pointed to mass civilian suffering and said, "Humanitarian needs are exploding while funding collapses," targeting refugees, LGBTIQ+ communities, minorities, and indigenous peoples.
- The U.N. human rights office is now in "survival mode", Guterres said, as funding shortages blocked two 2025 investigations and Washington paid about $160 million of over $4 billion owed.
- Looking ahead, climate and AI pose accelerating threats to rights, the UN warned as António Guterres and Volker Türk said the two-state solution is being stripped away in broad daylight amid rising domination.
93 Articles
93 Articles
Sudan: Doing What's Right Is 'Not a Spectator Sport', Human Rights Council Warned
In Geneva, delegates from more than 120 countries gathered on Monday to mark 20 years of the UN Human Rights Council and a shared commitment to international law, amid runaway global instability, wars and resurgent conflict.
Stefanie Dodt, ARD Geneva, at the opening of the 61st session of the UN Human Rights Council[more]>
António Guterres criticized the return of tyranny. "Human rights are deliberately, strategically and sometimes proudly pushed back all over the world," he said in Geneva on Monday.
In Geneva this Monday, 23 February, Antonio Guterres denounced a global decline in human rights, exacerbated by conflicts and the misuse of new technologies The Secretary General
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