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Article three—everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.
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No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
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No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.
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Last year, we celebrated the 70th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
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And it was an appalling year for human rights.
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How do I know?
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Because until only a few months ago, I was the U.N. human rights chief.
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These attacks cannot go unanswered.
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And I've seen violations of human rights firsthand.
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Probable genocide in Myanmar;
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Imprisonment of journalists in Egypt—and their murder in Turkey;
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Authoritarian-minded leaders elected in Brazil, Hungary, India, Russia, Italy and Austria;
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Oppression in China, Cambodia, Venezuela;
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Children separated from their parents and locked up right here in Trump's America.
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And I haven't even mentioned North Korea.
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Most of our political leaders are morally weak, shortsighted and mediocre.
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It used to be that abuses were called out and many were stopped.
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Human rights violators had something to fear.
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But today, the silence of those public officials is astounding.
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Their hypocrisy, sickening.
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And I fear they're no longer willing or able to defend the human rights of all people.
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And as a result, the worst human rights offenders are able to act with complete impunity.
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In all conflicts, you will see the most extreme of human violence.
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A bus filled with schoolchildren was struck by a missile.
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Nothing was seemingly being done to prevent these sorts of attacks, which were becoming commonplace.
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In Syria, if you measured the rhetoric of Western leaders, the rhetoric was quite strident.
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“I have decided that the United States should take military action against Syrian regime targets.”
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In Yemen, where we see children being blown up in buses, in marketplaces, schools, attending a wedding.
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I don't recall ever hearing a heavy condemnation of those airstrikes.
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What it says about Western leaders—well, it doesn't say very much.
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The way they prioritize their defense contracts seems to produce silence.
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So there may well be a connection, a nexus between weapons sales.
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“$3 billion, $533 million.”
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And the resulting muted response by Western governments to what was happening in Yemen.
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The Rohingya population in northern Rakhine, in October of 2016, there was an attack.
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And what we saw was frightful, the most extreme actions taken, even against small children, and seemed to be systematic in its organization and planning.
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There was a conference soon after the attacks.
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Maybe not even a single person attending mentioned the word Rohingya, which is the right to self-identification by that particular community.
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And if that's taken away from you, then what do you become?
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You become almost disposable.
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The U.N. itself is far from perfect.
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There wasn't resistance.
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Yemen, for example, when we had asked for an investigation, it took us a number of years before we actually had one approved.
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On Myanmar, it took us a few months before we could get to that position.
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My term ended after four years.
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It was clear to me that if I wanted an extension, what they would have asked me to do is not to discuss this issue or that issue and to start bargaining.
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And I wasn't going to be holding a position like this and then remain silent.
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It's easy to think, now that we have our human rights, they will be there forever.
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They cannot be taken away.
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But they are like the air you breathe.
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You don't think about it until you are gasping for your last breath.
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Know and defend your rights and crucially—the rights of others as well.