The virus has been used as a pretext in many countries to crush dissent, criminalise freedoms and silence reporting

  • António Guterres is secretary general of the United Nations

From the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic almost one year ago, it was clear that our world faced far more than a public health emergency. The biggest international crisis in generations quickly morphed into an economic and social crisis. One year on, another stark fact is tragically evident: our world is facing a pandemic of human rights abuses.

Covid-19 has deepened preexisting divides, vulnerabilities and inequalities, and opened up new fractures, including faultlines in human rights. The pandemic has revealed the interconnectedness of our human family – and of the full spectrum of human rights: civil, cultural, economic, political and social. When any one of these rights is under attack, others are at risk.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Shaun Bailey under pressure to decline peerage after Partygate video

Video appears to show Tory workers dancing at mid-lockdown ‘jingle and mingle’…

Hospital bed shortage is a result of Tory NHS cuts | Letter

The reason A&E staff are struggling to find beds is that the…

Distrust, disengagement and discord will be the disgraceful legacy of Boris Johnson | John Harris

The damage done by this prime minister’s misrule goes way beyond him,…