Countries are increasingly refusing to cooperate with the UN on human rights, the world body warned today, voicing alarm at situations in dozens of states, including Syria, Iran and Venezuela.
"States may shut my office out, but they will not shut us up; neither will they blind us," UN rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein said, opening the 32nd session of the UN Human Rights Council.
He decried "an emerging pattern" in which a growing number of states were refusing access to his staff and other UN representatives tasked with investigating allegations of rights violations in their countries.
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"This is a state led by a medical doctor and yet is believed to have gassed its own people," he said, also decrying attacks on hospitals and civilians neighbourhoods, and the detention of tens of thousands of people in "inhuman conditions".
"Words cannot convey how profoundly I condemn this situation," he said.
Zeid also criticised Venezuela, which for the past two and a half years has refused to even issue a visa to his representative in the region.
"Its comprehensive denial of access to my staff is particularly shocking in the light of our acute concerns regarding allegations of repression of opposition voices and civil society groups," he said.
Among his concerns he listed arbitrary arrests, excessive use of force against peaceful protests, and a dramatic decline in economic and social rights that has sparked widespread hunger.
Iran meanwhile had blocked all access to his staff since 2013, which he said was "particularly regrettable given the reports we continue to receive of fundamental problems with the administration of criminal justice" in the country.
Especially worrying, is the "continued execution of large numbers of people, including juveniles", he said.
Belarus, Eritrea and North Korea have also flatly refused all access by UN rights monitors, while Israel has repeatedly refused to cooperate with probes into the situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, he said.
Zeid also slammed the Turkey for not allowing his staff into its restive southeastern region, despite "repeated and serious allegations" of violations including "extrajudicial killings and massive displacement" amid demolition of entire towns and villages.
Zeid stressed that rights investigators would not turn a blind eye to situations simply because they were blocked from investigating them on the ground.
"If access is refused us, we will assume the worst," he said.
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