WUNRN

http://www.wunrn.com

 

Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict: Statement by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms. Navi Pillay, at the UN Security Council


New York, 07 July 2010

Allow me to express my sincere appreciation to the President and Members of the Security Council for giving me the opportunity to address this high-level open debate on the vital issue of the protection of civilians in armed conflict. Since my Office briefed the Council on this topic in November 2009, important developments have taken place pertaining to protection and accountability, which I will discuss today.

The Council’s initiative in developing a solid framework to protect civilians in many countries is most welcome.

However, protection still remains a dream for victims and the gulf between policy and practice is still vast. 

If we want to make a greater difference on the ground, human rights and humanitarian actors need to work together in order to give effect to the UN policy framework. I am sure that my colleague John Holmes would agree with me and I would like to take this opportunity to salute him for championing humanitarian action within the UN system. His leadership has enabled the development of meaningful partnerships to advance protection.

The Council has long recognized that the maintenance of peace and security will not be achieved or sustained without paying due attention to redressing grievances, ending impunity, and protecting the human rights of civilians.

Monitoring human rights conditions can serve to sound an alarm bell when situations are at risk of degenerating into violence. Information gathered by my own Office as well as the UN human rights mechanisms, including the Special Rapporteurs, can be very helpful to the Council in this regard.  When the security environment requires the dispatch of peace-keeping missions, a clear mandate with robust and well resourced human rights components becomes essential for effective implementation of protection measures.

Accountability of perpetrators is key for the protection of civilians. Amongst the most significant actions taken by the Council for the protection of civilians is the establishment of commissions of inquiry. I am pleased that, on several occasions, the Council and the Secretary-General have requested my Office to assist these Commissions. More use could be made of such mechanisms.

It is worth recalling that States bear the primary responsibility for carrying out investigations and prosecutions regarding genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and gross human rights violations.  Several countries have established national commissions of inquiry. These are welcome demonstrations of a State’s willingness to seek justice. True accountability can only be achieved if national inquiry mechanisms are credible, independent and impartial. Such national commissions should have the power of access to all relevant authorities, persons and information, as well as adequate financial and human resources. It is these conditions that will instill confidence and trust in these national initiatives.

The Council has acted to promote accountability.  It has explicitly made its support for the military operations of national armed forces conditional on their observance of human rights law, humanitarian law and refugee law. We need to ensure that the UN and bilateral support to military operations and security sector reform is tied to promoting respect for human rights.

Let me now update you on situations where the protection of civilians has been and remains of great concern.

In Afghanistan, the intensifying conflict has had an intolerable impact on civilians.  Many lives are being lost, homes destroyed, livelihood and access to basic services threatened.  Clearly, the anti-government insurgents with their widespread use of indiscriminate suicide bombing and targeted assassinations present a fundamental challenge.  I am also concerned about civilian casualties caused by aerial attacks and ground operations, including from search and seizure operations, carried out by Afghan National Security Forces and International Military Forces. Moreover, women and girls continue to face widespread human rights abuses including abduction, trafficking, sexual violence, forced and underage marriage and harmful practices justified on the basis of tradition. I am particularly concerned about the legal framework, which in many instances, institutionalizes violence and discrimination against women. Although the government has taken steps to enact laws aimed at protecting women’s rights, these laws remain largely unimplemented.

The corrosive effect of impunity on both human rights and peace is evident in the case of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Few perpetrators of serious violations of human rights and humanitarian law have been brought to justice. Some research even indicates that rape and violence against women has increased despite all the attention it has received in recent years.  In this context, I wish to recall that, in cooperation with the Government of the DRC, OHCHR undertook an exercise to map out the most serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law in the DRC between 1993 and 2003.  This exercise is a contribution to combating impunity and supporting transitional justice. The report will be published soon.

Following the recommendations of the International Commission of Inquiry into the September 2009 events in Guinea, an OHCHR start-up presence has been deployed to the country.  We expect this presence to gradually evolve into a fully-fledged office which can more effectively help the Government to address the human rights challenges that the country faces. In addition, OHCHR dispatched a small team to assist the authorities, in co-operation with other UN bodies, in ensuring respect for human rights throughout the electoral process.

The serious protection concerns in the aftermath of the earthquake in Haiti are of a magnitude that warrants the utmost attention. Death and destruction are compounded by displacement, and women and children continue to be vulnerable to widespread sexual and gender based violence and trafficking.   Alleviating these conditions remains the priority of the Human Rights Section of MINUSTAH, acting in concert with the Protection Cluster led by OHCHR and UNHCR. With regard to accountability for continued human rights violations, I note the establishment of the Joint Investigative Commission which, starting next week, will seek to determine the facts around the events which led to an as of yet undetermined number of violent deaths in the Les Cayes Prison on 19 January 2010.

Turning now to Kyrgyzstan where a deadly wave of violence engulfed the south of the country last June, I am particularly concerned about the targeting and indiscriminate killing of civilians, including children; looting and destruction of public and private property; displacement; and sexual violence. My office leads the human rights sub-cluster within the protection cluster and works closely with all humanitarian agencies, especially UNHCR, so as to address the most critical protection challenges and contribute to strengthening the rule of law. On the accountability front, I continue to be convinced of the need for an independent international inquiry. Meanwhile, we stand ready to engage should there be credible national investigations aimed at establishing the facts and the responsibility for the attacks. 

Both Palestinian and Israeli civilians have the right to live in peace and security.  I welcome the decision of the Government of Israel to moderate its blockade of Gaza.  Yet I stress the urgent need to ensure the open flow of imports and exports to and from Gaza. I urge the Council to take appropriate action to ensure the lifting in full of the blockade. In the West Bank including East Jerusalem, settler violence, forced evictions, home demolitions, revocation of residency permits, arbitrary detention and torture are taking place with impunity. I urge the Security Council to support the recommendations of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, especially those that call for accountability for all perpetrators of violations. In accordance with relevant resolutions of the Human Rights Council, a follow-up mechanism is currently monitoring and assessing domestic, legal or other proceedings undertaken by both the Government of Israel and the Palestinian side. The Council has also mandated an independent fact-finding mission, which will soon start investigating violations resulting from the Israeli military action against the flotilla carrying humanitarian assistance to Gaza. 

Turning now to Sri Lanka, let me recall the unacceptably high level of loss of civilian lives caused by both sides of the conflict in that country.  Since the end of the conflict, some progress has been made in the return and resettlement of internally displaced persons. Concrete initiatives must now follow to provide justice and redress to victims and to promote accountability and longer-term reconciliation. The leadership of the Secretary-General in establishing an expert panel to advise him on these issues is a welcome step in this direction. 

With regard to Sudan, in Darfur, sporadic fighting between armed movements and Government forces continues to result in civilian casualties, destruction of civilian property and large scale displacement. Civilian lives are also being lost in inter-communal violence stemming from resource-related disputes.  Across Southern Sudan, also, lawlessness, inter-communal violence compounded by widespread proliferation of arms and ammunition continue to put civilians at risk. In 2009 alone, there were at least 2,500 violent civilian deaths and more than 350,000 people displaced. Given the likelihood of more violence in the lead up to the 2011 referendum, there continues to be an urgent need for a more proactive protection of civilians.

In the course of the last decades, grave violations of human rights and international humanitarian law have been a tragic common denominator in armed conflicts, with civilian targets of attacks by State and non-State actors. I raised today many situations needing serious and urgent attention. I welcome this opportunity to strengthen OHCHR’s cooperation with the Council and I remain at your disposal to answer any question you may have.

Thank you.

 

_________________________________________________________________________

 

----- Original Message -----

From: WUNRN ListServe

To: WUNRN ListServe

Sent: Saturday, November 14, 2009 7:37 PM

Subject: Protection of Women & Children Civilians in War & Conflict

 

WUNRN

http://www.wunrn.com

 

PROTECTION OF WOMEN & CHILDREN CIVILIANS IN WAR & CONFLICT

______________________________________________________________________

 

Attached is the 18-Page Report of the UN Secretary-General on WOMEN & PEACE

& SECURITY S/2009/465 - 16 September 2009 - Implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1325.

_______________________________________________________________________

 

Link to UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security:

http://www.peacewomen.org/un/sc/res1325.pdf

________________________________________________________________________

 

Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War. Geneva, 12 August 1949.

http://www.icrc.org/ihl.nsf/7c4d08d9b287a42141256739003e636b/6756482d86146898c125641e004aa3c5

 

UN Member State Ratifications have made the Geneva Conventions universally applicable. http://www.icrc.org/web/Eng/siteeng0.nsf/html/genevaconventions#a1

_________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/media.aspx

 

11 November 2009

Civilians in armed conflict: “Same standards of international law should be enforced,” Pillay tells UN Security Council

UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK (11 November 2009) - “More political will and less political exceptionalism” is required for the UN Security Council to be more effective in its critically important work of protecting civilians in situations of armed conflict, according to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay.

Addressing the Security Council today on behalf of the High Commissioner, the Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, Kyung-wha Kang, emphasized that “all must be held to a single standard”, including the explicit application of international law and its enforcement.

For 10 years now, the Security Council has been discussing this issue, she remarked, and while this has significantly advanced understanding of the crucial importance of protection of civilians and human rights to the cause of international peace and security, “a higher level of political will must be mobilized to take timely and effective action to prevent atrocities, protect the vulnerable, hold perpetrators to account, and ensure redress for victims.”

When we say ‘protection’, the High Commissioner said in her statement, we are talking about protection of the human rights of individuals as contained in international law. The authority of this law “cannot be replaced by more amorphous notions of protection, or by less obligatory notions of charitable action.”

The establishment of tribunals, such as for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, as well as the referral of specific cases to the International Criminal Court, “have helped to send an important signal that even in the ‘fog of war’ impunity is not assured,” she said. “The dispatch of credible, independent, law-based, accountability-focused, and publicly-reporting commissions of inquiry has proven to be an important catalyst in the Council’s efforts to combat impunity, and more use could be made of such mechanisms.”

Pointing to the example of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on Gaza, headed by distinguished international jurist Richard Goldstone, the High Commissioner described how this report documents the “corrosive effect of impunity on both human rights and peace”. It lays out in detail the nature and scope of violations of international human rights and humanitarian law perpetrated on civilians. “Until meaningful steps are taken to end impunity for these violations and assert the applicability of international law, peace and security will remain elusive for all the people of the region,” she stated.

Another example the High Commissioner pointed to is the situation in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, which she described as “a horrifying reminder of the depths to which inhumanity can spiral if left unchecked.” Hundreds of civilians have been killed there this year alone, and sexual violence including rape, has increased drastically. “Well-known human rights violators, including an ICC indictee, continue to occupy high level command positions within the Congolese army,” she said. “Recent public statements by senior Government officials demonstrate a lack of political will to investigate high ranking officials and raises doubt regarding the zero tolerance policy against sexual violence proclaimed by the President.”

In Darfur, years of effort to bring effective protection to the long-suffering civilians has been unsuccessful, she pointed out. This despite the International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur which concluded that Government forces and militias were responsible for serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law, and which led to the referral of the situation to the International Criminal Court. “But justice remains elusive, and violations continue,” she said.

And in Afghanistan, where the continuing conflict has repeatedly caught civilians in the cross-fire, there is an urgent need to improve accountability, including through criminal prosecution as well as redress for victims, she said. “The failure to pursue a credible transitional justice strategy including holding to account those responsible for the gravest of crimes over more than three decades of war and the climate of impunity created thereby is a significant factor in the challenging political context and growing insecurity that now envelope Afghanistan.”

“Law, without enforcement,” she said, “is of little moment to would-be perpetrators. To be effective in the protection of civilians, the Council must consistently work to ensure accountability for perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity and other gross violations of human rights.”

This was the first time since 2005 that the High Commissioner for Human Rights has been invited to address the Security Council in an open meeting. The High Commissioner welcomed this opportunity and offered her assistance to ensure that in future the Security Council received relevant human rights information related to the protection of civilians in countries on its agenda.





================================================================
To contact the list administrator, or to leave the list, send an email to: wunrn_listserve-request@lists.wunrn.com. Thank you.