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Nils Melzer is the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture.
@NilsMelzer
Today, we observe Human Rights Day. On this day, we remember that
human dignity is universal and the prohibition of torture is absolute.
At the same time, we know that torture, cruelty, and humiliation is
still practiced with impunity throughout the world.
Today, I am particularly concerned about the unspeakable suffering of
people on the move, those millions of women, men and children who have
left their homes to seek safety and opportunity elsewhere, but who all
too often get trapped in border-zones, detention centers, deserts or at
sea, exposed not only to deliberate abuse, but also to the worst cruelty
of all: our own indifference.
We know these people are exploited by smugglers, traffickers and
corrupt officials, we know they are being tortured, raped, enslaved, and
butchered for their organs. We know they have nowhere else to go. And
yet, no one feels responsible. Instead, we erect physical and mental
barriers, we think and speak of hostile invasion and send the military
to defend our borders. But today I ask: against whom? Against this
ragtag “army” of emaciated bodies, carrying their belongings in plastic
bags and babies in their arms?
Have we shrunk so far from our own humanity that we can no longer
recognize theirs? Or are we simply too comfortable to recognize that
much of our own prosperity grows on the ashes of other peoples’ lives,
on the swamps of inhumane working conditions, on the blood spilt by
conflicts fought with our weapons, on the smoldering remnants of an
environment destroyed by our extractive companies? After we have taken
their resources, exploited their labor, ransacked their environment,
colluded with their dictators and fueled conflict that turned their
lands into battlefields – are we really surprised they come knocking on our doors saying they would rather live at our place now?
Human Rights Day also makes me remember the countless prisoners I
have visited over the years, in wars from the Balkans to the Middle East
and, more recently, in Turkey, Serbia and Kosovo, Argentina and
Ukraine. Some were hungry, others were cold. Some were sick and others
depressed. Some had been threatened, abused and humiliated. Some had no
space to sleep or even sit, and many suffered from bedbugs, rats and
lice. But the first question they asked was never about themselves.
“Sir, do you have news of my family? Can you take a letter for them?
Please tell them I love them!” This taught me that, whoever and wherever
we are and whatever we have done, we always remain members not only of
our own families, but also of the global human family.
As we mark Human Rights Day, we also approach the festive seasons
being celebrated worldwide. And as we gather with our loved ones around
Christmas trees, dining tables and living rooms, do we ever ask
ourselves what it feels like to be stuck in a rubber dinghy that day,
facing the choice between drowning in the freezing sea or going back to
torture and abuse?
Do we ever ask ourselves what it feels like to be stuck in an
overcrowded cell, wondering whether you will be raped that day? Do we
ever ask ourselves what it feels like to be a child stuck in a coal mine
that day, your lungs burning from the dust? And do we ever ask
ourselves who is being most deeply dehumanized in a world tolerating
such abuse: Is it the victims, ripped apart by pain and humiliation? Is
it the perpetrators, lowering themselves below the most ferocious of
beasts? Or is it all of us, wining and dining in the bubbles of our cozy
homes while our siblings are being broken, crushed and annihilated on
our front steps?
Arising from the ashes of World War II, the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights proclaimed nothing less than a global human family based on
peace, justice and human dignity. Today, 70 years later, we still have
not delivered on that promise, and we still have to look in the mirror
and face the truth that, if we don’t change our ways, step up and take
responsibility, no one ever will.
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