UN rights chief warns over rise of ‘racist’ politics in EU

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay looks on after her address to the 26th session of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva Tuesday.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay looks on after her address to the 26th session of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva Tuesday.

GENEVA — UN human rights chief Navi Pillay expressed alarm on Tuesday at the rise in extremist, racist rhetoric in Europe, warning that anti-immigrant language can spark serious rights abuses.

“I am disturbed by the recent increase across the political spectrum in several states in Western Europe of a discourse rooted in anti-immigrant and racist sentiment and religious intolerance,” Pillay told diplomats as she opened a UN Human Rights Council session in Geneva.

Following the stunning gains by eurosceptic, anti-immigrant and xenophobic parties in last month’s European Parliament elections, she said politicians who have made a range of disturbing statements will figure among EU lawmakers.

“The new European Parliament will include a German party leader who has said: ‘Europe is the continent of white people and it should remain that way’,” Pillay said, referring to Udo Voigt of the extremist National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD).

The UN High Commissioner of Human Rights, making her last statement to the council, also noted that Marine Le Pen, who heads France’s National Front (FN), will sit in the Parliament, despite comments comparing “peaceful Muslim street prayers to the military occupation of her country by the Nazis.”

And one of the new Italian MEPs has been found guilty of “setting fire to the pallets of migrants sleeping under a bridge,” she said. Such comments and actions are in no way harmless, Pillay said.

“There is a road to perpetration of human rights violations. And hate speech — particularly by political leaders — is on that road,” she said. She highlighted the deadly attack last month on the Jewish Museum in Brussels, insisting that such acts of violence “are not unconnected to this climate of extremism.”

“Expressions of racial, religious or xenophobic division that overtly call for, or suggest, targeted actions against minority groups should be anathema in every member state of the United Nations,” she said.

She called on countries to implement human rights education campaigns to “counteract these alarming trends.”

Pillay, who has served six years as the UN’s rights chief, will hand over to Jordan’s ambassador to the UN, Prince Zeid al-Hussein on Sept. 1.

 

 

 

 



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