OHCHR / TURK GLOBAL UPDATE

UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk delivered his global update to the Human Rights Council in Geneva, highlighting key issues and trends, and the human rights situation in some 60 countries. UNTV CH / OHCHR
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Description

STORY: OHCHR / TURK GLOBAL UPDATE
TRT: 07:27
SOURCE: UNTV CH / OHCHR
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 16 JUNE 2025 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

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Shotlist

FILE - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

1. Wide shot, exterior, Palais des Nations

16 JUNE 2025 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

2. Various shots, conference room 20
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“Behind each crisis, people are suffering. We must never lose sight of this fact. The United Nations was founded to end war, reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, and promote justice and international law.”
4. Med shot, camera operators
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“States agreed on wide-ranging laws of war. They adopted treaties on women’s rights, on the environment, on disarmament, on preventing genocide.”
6. Wide shot, delegates
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“Despite edging close to nuclear annihilation several times, reason prevailed. Our global agreements have proven themselves over decades.”
8. Wide shot, delegates
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations: “Today, we see dramatic steps to weaken them, creating a more dangerous world for us all. Can we sit by as global security and prosperity are undermined? Will we watch as the rule of law is eroded? Can we continue as usual, while powerful countries cast aside the agreements that underpin our lives? Can we risk massive conflict based on leaders’ personal assessments and agendas? We must ask ourselves, is this the world the framers of the Charter imagined? And we must answer with the strongest possible defence of international law, and human rights.”
10. Med shot, delegates
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations: “The current trajectory – of escalating conflict and blatant disregard for international human rights and humanitarian law – is indefensible. Civilians are deliberately attacked. Parties to conflict starve and rape as weapons of war. Life-saving humanitarian aid is obstructed, and humanitarian aid workers are targeted. And accountability is often absent.”
12. Med shot, delegates
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations: “Around the world, at least 625 human rights defenders and media workers were killed or disappeared in 2024, according to data gathered by my Office. That is one every 14 hours.”
14. Wide shot, delegates
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
Social tensions are often rooted in systemic, long-standing discrimination based on race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, migrant status, caste, and other characteristics. Policies to tackle such discrimination have had important successes in all regions of the world. Some call these DEI policies. I call them standing up for equality.”
16. Close up, camera
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations: “When we look at the pushback against such policies, we see it for what it is: a fundamental misrepresentation that reveals a strategic decision to scapegoat vulnerable groups. Discrimination is neither rare nor random; it is widespread. Across 119 countries, one in five people reported experiencing discrimination in the past year, according to data gathered by my Office. Colonialism’s brutal legacy persists. Racism remains a scourge.”
18. Wide shot, dais
19. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“Data gathered by my Office shows that worldwide, women face discrimination at more than double the level experienced by men.”
20. Med shot, cameras
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“As disturbing as this pushback is, we must not fall for the hype. This is not a global phenomenon. The vast majority of countries around the world continue to support the expansion of human rights and fundamental freedoms. Half the world’s population now benefits from effective national human rights institutions that work with my Office. That figure has tripled in the past two decades. And policies to promote equality are working.”
22. Med shot, delegates
23. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“Many of the poorest people in the world are falling even further behind, with their rights to food, health, and an adequate standard of living under assault. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is slipping out of reach.”
24. Med shot, delegates
25. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“The recent imposition of soaring tariffs may seem like a high-stakes poker game, with the global economy as the bank,” he stressed. “Higher tariffs could put healthcare, education, and a nutritious diet out of reach for many. Higher tariffs could also roll back gains on gender equality, as they have a disproportionate impact on women working in low-paid manufacturing jobs.”
26. Close up, delegates
27. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations: “Human rights provide stability and security in our troubled times. They are a bridge between governments and people, between generations past, present and future. And they are guardrails on power, especially when it is unleashed in its most brutal forms.”
28. Wide shot, camera operator
29. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“I am therefore deeply disturbed by attacks on the international institutions that underpin our rights, including the International Criminal Court. Sanctioning judges and prosecutors at national, regional, or international levels, for doing their jobs, is an assault on the rule of law and corrodes justice.”
30. Close up, delegates
31. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations:
“I am also deeply troubled by funding cuts to my Office, to the Human Rights Mechanisms, and to our partners in civil society.”
32. Close up, delegates
33. SOUNDBITE (English) Volker Türk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations: “That means fewer early warnings; less advocacy for people who are wrongly imprisoned; fewer investigations into abuses and violations; less accountability. Funding cuts to my Office, and the broader human rights ecosystem, offer comfort to dictators and authoritarians. But the vast majority, and our global security, will be harmed. At this testing time, we need governments and societies to stand up for human rights, in word and deed.”
34. Wide shot, dais

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Storyline

UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk today (16 Jun) delivered his global update to the Human Rights Council in Geneva, highlighting key issues and trends, and the human rights situation in some 60 countries.

Conflicts are spiralling and climate chaos rages on, while in every region of the world, economic uncertainty is taking root and technology is developing uncontrolled and at dizzying speed, Türk stressed.

“Behind each crisis, people are suffering. We must never lose sight of this fact. The United Nations was founded to end war, reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, and promote justice and international law,” Türk said.

The High Commissioner said that for 80 years, those promises helped to deliver a greater measure of peace and sustainable development. Life expectancy increased by 25 years and the number of people with a basic education doubled.

“States agreed on wide-ranging laws of war. They adopted treaties on women’s rights, on the environment, on disarmament, on preventing genocide,” he said.

“Despite edging close to nuclear annihilation several times, reason prevailed. Our global agreements have proven themselves over decades,” Turk noted.

“Today, we see dramatic steps to weaken them, creating a more dangerous world for us all. Can we sit by as global security and prosperity are undermined? Will we watch as the rule of law is eroded? Can we continue as usual, while powerful countries cast aside the agreements that underpin our lives? Can we risk massive conflict based on leaders’ personal assessments and agendas? We must ask ourselves, is this the world the framers of the Charter imagined? And we must answer with the strongest possible defence of international law, and human rights,” Türk warned.

“The current trajectory – of escalating conflict and blatant disregard for international human rights and humanitarian law – is indefensible. Civilians are deliberately attacked. Parties to conflict starve and rape as weapons of war. Life-saving humanitarian aid is obstructed, and humanitarian aid workers are targeted. And accountability is often absent,” Türk said.

“Around the world, at least 625 human rights defenders and media workers were killed or disappeared in 2024, according to data gathered by my Office. That is one every 14 hours,” the High Commissioner said.

In many places around the world, civil society and the media are being vilified, harassed, and silenced, Türk said. But it is precisely civil society and the media who hold power to account and must be protected.

“Social tensions are often rooted in systemic, long-standing discrimination based on race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, migrant status, caste, and other characteristics. Policies to tackle such discrimination have had important successes in all regions of the world. Some call these DEI policies. I call them standing up for equality,” Türk said.

“When we look at the pushback against such policies, we see it for what it is: a fundamental misrepresentation that reveals a strategic decision to scapegoat vulnerable groups. Discrimination is neither rare nor random; it is widespread. Across 119 countries, one in five people reported experiencing discrimination in the past year, according to data gathered by my Office. Colonialism’s brutal legacy persists. Racism remains a scourge,” he said.

“Data gathered by my Office shows that worldwide, women face discrimination at more than double the level experienced by men,” the UN Human Rights Chief highlighted.

“As disturbing as this pushback is, we must not fall for the hype. This is not a global phenomenon. The vast majority of countries around the world continue to support the expansion of human rights and fundamental freedoms. Half the world’s population now benefits from effective national human rights institutions that work with my Office. That figure has tripled in the past two decades. And policies to promote equality are working,” he said.

“Many of the poorest people in the world are falling even further behind, with their rights to food, health, and an adequate standard of living under assault. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is slipping out of reach,” he said.

“The recent imposition of soaring tariffs may seem like a high-stakes poker game, with the global economy as the bank,” he stressed. “Higher tariffs could put healthcare, education, and a nutritious diet out of reach for many. Higher tariffs could also roll back gains on gender equality, as they have a disproportionate impact on women working in low-paid manufacturing jobs.”

Populists and authoritarians are working hard with their so-called culture wars to distract people from today’s very real problems, which is why we need more human rights not fewer, the High Commissioner said.

“Human rights provide stability and security in our troubled times. They are a bridge between governments and people, between generations past, present and future. And they are guardrails on power, especially when it is unleashed in its most brutal forms,” Türk stated.

The High Commissioner highlighted the painstaking work of investigating and reporting abuses and violations, supporting human rights institutions and addressing human rights emergencies. These are the best tools to have to prevent and mitigate conflict; and to build peace.

“I am therefore deeply disturbed by attacks on the international institutions that underpin our rights, including the International Criminal Court. Sanctioning judges and prosecutors at national, regional, or international levels, for doing their jobs, is an assault on the rule of law and corrodes justice,” Türk stressed.

“I am also deeply troubled by funding cuts to my Office, to the Human Rights Mechanisms, and to our partners in civil society,” he said.

Nearly three-quarters of the UN Human Rights Office’s partner organizations expect to lose more than 40 percent of their funding.

“That means fewer early warnings; less advocacy for people who are wrongly imprisoned; fewer investigations into abuses and violations; less accountability. Funding cuts to my Office, and the broader human rights ecosystem, offer comfort to dictators and authoritarians. But the vast majority, and our global security, will be harmed. At this testing time, we need governments and societies to stand up for human rights, in word and deed,” Türk concluded.

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