Human Rights 

Thursday’s Daily Brief: Safeguarding civilians, strengthening Ebola response in DR Congo, marking Fistula Day, updates on CAR and Syria 

Better safeguards to protect civilians amidst deteriorating compliance 

Marking 20 years since the UN Security Council added the protection of civilians to its agenda, Secretary-General António Guterres told the chamber on Thursday that while safeguards were stronger, “compliance has deteriorated”.   

“We are rightly critical when assessing the state of the protection of civilians, for there is great cause of concern”, he said.  

The UN chief walked members through 20 years of progress, saying that a “culture of protection” had indeed “taken root” that encompasses a comprehensive framework based on international law, and becoming one of the peace and security body’s “core issues”.   
Read our full story here

‘No time to lose’ in addressing DR Congo’s deadly Ebola virus, says new UN response coordinator 

With the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s worst ever Ebola outbreak now in its tenth month, the UN on Thursday announced measures to strengthen its response, with the Organization’s newly appointed Emergency Coordinator (EERC) declaring there is “no time to lose”. 

Amidst a surge in new cases, the epidemic has claimed more than 1,200 lives and threatens to spread to other provinces in the east, as well as neighbouring countries. A third of those infected have been children; a higher proportion than during previous outbreaks.  

 “The Ebola response is working in an operating environment of unprecedented complexity for a public health emergency”, said EERC David Gressly, adding that “insecurity and political protests have led to periodic disruptions in our efforts to fight the disease.”  Go here for the full story. 

Obstetric fistula continues to afflict women globally  

Marking the International Day to end Fistula on Thursday, the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) cited UN data in pointing out that although the injury has largely been eliminated in developed countries, more than two million women and girls still suffer from the painful and disfiguring condition. 

Hundreds of thousands of women and girls worldwide continue to “face devastating social stigma” of this almost entirely preventable condition, including “shame, isolation and segregation”, said UNFPA Executive Director Natalia Kanem said in a statement.   

According to the UN’s sexual and reproductive health agency, obstetric fistula is one of the most serious injuries that can occur during childbirth, leaving a hole between the birth canal and the bladder or rectum, caused by prolonged, obstructed labour, without treatment. Here’s our take on the day.

UN mission condemns attack that takes over 50 lives in Central African Republic 

An attack in the Central African Republic (CAR) on Tuesday, which reportedly left more than 50 dead, has been condemned by the UN Stabilization Mission in the country, MINUSCA. 

News reports said that not far from the Chadian border, an armed group attacked several villages in the Ooham-Pende Prefecture.  
Since 2012, the country has been plagued by fighting between the mostly Christian anti-Balaka militia and mainly Muslim Séléka rebels.

In February, the Government signed a deal with more than a dozen militias aimed to stabilize the country in which thousands of civilians have been killed and two out of three people in CAR have become dependent on humanitarian aid. 

A joint mission by MINUSCA, the Central African Government and the African Union – as well as the Economic Community of Central African States – is expected to be deployed to the affected areas at the weekend, “to defuse tensions, assist victims and displaced persons and reassure communities”, said UN Spokesperson, Stéphane Dujarric on Thursday. 

Respect the International Humanitarian Law obligations protecting civilians 

The UN remains deeply alarmed by ongoing reports of airstrikes, artillery shelling and clashes in and around the de-escalation zone in northwestern Syria, it said on Thursday, noting that since late April, 100 people have died and repeated attacks on civilian infrastructure has increased the number of displaced. 

Over the past 48 hours alone, dozens of casualties and damage to civilian infrastructure has been reported in Idlib and Hama governorates, as well as in northern and northeastern Aleppo. Attacks are also reported in some government-controlled areas. 
Some 201,000 people are now reported to have been displaced due to violence between 1-16 May, bringing the total number of displaced people from northern Hama and southern Idlib since 1 April to 240,000. 

The UN continues to call on the parties to respect the obligations under International Humanitarian Law to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, and to recommit fully to the ceasefire arrangements agreed between Russia and Turkey in September. 

Amnesty bill on table for rights violators in El Salvador, warns UN rights chief 

The UN human rights chief on Thursday warned that a draft justice and reconciliation bill making its way through the legislature in El Salvador could result in de facto amnesty for serious human rights violators.  

High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet said that if passed as it stands, the Transitional and Restorative Justice for National Reconciliation bill, “will unduly benefit” those who were “directly responsible for crimes against humanity and war crimes” during the country’s long civil war of the 1980s and 1990s.  

Crimes included “extrajudicial executions of children, women and the elderly, enforced disappearances, torture, sexual violence and other serious violations of international law,” the High Commissioner said.   

She said the bill would also result in “impunity for the masterminds and military leaders who ordered such crimes or failed to adopt measures to prevent or stop them.”   

Listen to, or download our audio News In Brief for 23 May, on SoundCloud: 

Related posts