UN refugee chief says 114 million have fled homes because nations fail to tackle causes of conflict
UNB
Publish: 31 May 2024, 07:51 PM
UNITED
NATIONS, May 31 (AP/UNB) - The number of people fleeing their homes because of
war, violence and persecution has reached 114 million and is climbing because
nations have failed to tackle the causes and combatants are refusing to comply
with international law, the U.N. refugee chief said Thursday.
In a hard-hitting
speech, Filippo Grandi criticized the U.N. Security Council, which is charged
with maintaining international peace and security, for failing to use its voice
to try to resolve conflicts from Gaza, Ukraine and Sudan to Congo, Myanmar and
many other places.
He also accused unnamed
countries of making "short-sighted foreign policy decisions, often founded
on double standards, with lip service paid to compliance with the law, but
little muscle flexed from the council to actually uphold it and - with it -
peace and security."
Grandi said
non-compliance with international humanitarian law means that "parties to
conflicts - increasingly everywhere, almost all of them - have stopped respecting
the laws of war," though some pretend to do so.
The result is more
civilian deaths, sexual violence is used as a weapons of war, hospitals,
schools and other civilian infrastructure are attacked and destroyed, and
humanitarian workers become targets, he said.
Calling himself a
frustrated humanitarian and looking directly at the 15 council members, Grandi
said that instead of using its voice, "the council's cacophony has meant
that you have instead continued to preside over a broader cacophony of chaos
around the world."
The high commissioner
for refugees told the council it's too late for the tens of thousands who have
been killed in Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan and other conflicts.
"But it is not too
late to put your focus and energy on the crises and conflicts that remain
unresolved, so that they are not allowed to fester and explode again,"
Grandi said. "It is not too late to step up help for the millions who have
been forcibly displaced to return home voluntarily, in safety and with
dignity."
It's also not too late
to save millions of people from the scourge of war, the refugee chief said.
But the Security Council
is increasingly polarized, and its five veto-wielding permanent members are at
odds, with the U.S., Britain and France often strongly opposed to the views of
Russia and China.
On the Gaza war, the
council has not called for a cease-fire because of opposition from the United
States, Israel's closest ally. And on Ukraine, the council has been ineffective
as Russia, a key party to the conflict after Moscow invaded its smaller
neighbor in February 2022, would veto almost any resolution.
Grandi called what's
happened in Gaza since Hamas' surprise attack on Oct. 7 and the
"atrocious" recent events in the southern city of Rafah after an
Israeli airstrike led to a deadly fire at a camp for displaced Palestinians an
example of the "brutal conduct of hostilities meant not only to destroy
but also to terrify civilians," who increasingly more often have no choice
but to flee.
He said Gaza is also
"a tragic reminder of what happens when conflicts (and by extension a
refugee crisis) are left unattended" for decades. He also pointed to Syria
where after 13 years of conflict, 5.6 million Syrian refugees remain in
neighboring countries including Lebanon and Jordan which also host Palestinian
refugees.
Grandi said violations
of international law, including forcing people to flee, are having a
devastating effect on people around the world.
For example, in Myanmar,
more than 1.5 million people have been displaced by fighting since October,
bringing the total to over 3 million, "with many trying to seek refuge in
neighboring countries," he said.
In Ukraine,
international humanitarian law is violated every day with Russian attacks on
the country's power networks, houses and other civilian infrastructure, he
said.
And in Congo, Grandi
said, "violence between men with guns is so common that no other place on
Earth is as dangerous for women and children than the east of that
country."
"But how can
members of the United Nations, how can `we the peoples' pay so little attention
and have so much inaction in a place where sex with a child can be bought for
less than a cold drink?" the refugee chief asked.
"What a shameful
stain on humanity!" Grandi said.
