Tuesday 27 February 2018

SWI swissinfo.ch: Swiss urge states to reject ‘law of the strongest’

Front page - SWI swissinfo.ch
UN Human Rights Council
Swiss urge states to reject ‘law of the strongest’

    Politics

    in depth: International Geneva

    1
    Reuse article

See in another language: 1  Languages: 1
This content was published on February 26, 2018 11:31 AMFeb 26, 2018 - 11:31
Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis at Human Rights Council in Geneva

Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis addresses the opening of the 37th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on February 26, 2018
(Keystone)

Switzerland’s Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis has called on states to reject a world where the “law of the strongest” prevails during his first speech at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council on Monday.

Addressing a packed hall including around 100 heads of state, foreign ministers and other officials, Cassis said the key to safeguarding Switzerland’s interests, building global prosperity and guaranteeing peace is the “rule of law” and “not the law of the strongest”.

In his ten-minute speechexternal link, Cassis, who was elected to the seven-member Federal Council last September, renewed Switzerland’s commitment to the ideals laid out in Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which marks its 70th anniversary this year.

“This text still has its raison d'être,” he declared at the start of the 37th session of the UN rights forumexternal link, its main four-week annual session.

During his speech, the Swiss minister did not refer to any specific rights contexts. Instead, he called globally for an end to systematic violations of human rights, while noting a worrying increase in racism, xenophobia and other forms of discrimination. “Conflicts are expensive,” he added. Effective prevention could save states and international donors between $5-70 billion dollars (CHF4.6-65 billion) a year.

Cassis also urged greater political support and resources to guarantee the continued “success” of the Human Rights Council, as well as that of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Raad al-Hussein, who plays an “essential role”. Since the election of Donald Trump, the US has repeatedly called for reforms of the rights council and an end to an excessive focus on Israel.
Support for ceasefire

At a press conference, Cassis said Switzerland fully supported a 30-day ceasefire called by the UN Security Council in Syria.

He highlighted Switzerland's role in providing humanitarian aid to the war-torn country in the Middle East.

Aid agencies are waiting to evacuate wounded people and deliver supplies to an estimated 400,000 people under siege in the rebel-held enclave of Ghouta.

ATS-SDA/sb, ug
Neuer Inhalt

Horizontal Line
subscription form

Form for signing up for free newsletter.

Sign up for our free newsletters and get the top stories delivered to your inbox.
Email address
Top stories (weekly)
Latest news (daily)
Business (weekly)
Politics (weekly)
Society (weekly)
Fintech (monthly)

Click here to see more newsletters
WEF 2018

WEF Teaser 2018
Podcast
There is one comment on this article.
|
Log In

During a test phase, unregistered users can also comment.

Write a comment...
"VeraGottlieb commented on the content at 26 February 2018 17:52".
VeraGottlieb 26-Feb-2018 17:52
So many nations should heed this advice.
Write an answer...
Related Stories
Two men, one with key on neck

Image News
Keyed up
New foreign affairs minister ready for EU challenge

Outgoing Swiss Foreign Affairs Minister Didier Burkhalter has handed the key to the office over to his successor, Ignazio Cassis.

    Politics

See in other languages: 5
Manifestation à Brisbane
Corporate social responsibility
How the UN pushed to make business more responsible
By Frédéric Burnand

Political scientist Gilles Carbonnier examines the key UN processes and milestones in the slow acceptance of corporate social responsibility. 

    in depth: International Geneva

    Business
    Politics
    Law and order

See in other languages: 4
US President Donald Trump speaks during the opening session of the 72nd United Nations General Assembly
International Geneva
Trump chips away at multilateral institutions
By Simon Bradley

One year on, we look at the impact of Trump’s ‘America First’ foreign policy on International Geneva.
13 There are 13 comments on this article.

    in depth: International Geneva

    Politics
    Business

See in other languages: 3
Syrian children demonstrating
Inside Geneva
So many war crimes, so little justice
By Imogen Foulkes

Hardly a week goes by in Geneva without a UN report sounding the alarm about war crimes or crimes against humanity taking place somewhere.
1 There is one comment on this article.

    in depth: International Geneva

    Law and order
    Conflict

See in other languages: 3
Footer

    The company | Partnerships | Imprint | Jobs | Play SWI | Newsletter subscription | Contact

Back to top
World partners:

    Radio Netherlands Worldwide | Radio Canada International | Radio Praha | Polskie Radio

    RTS | SRF | RSI | RTR | SWI

Front page - SWI swissinfo.ch
swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

No comments: