In an annual report to the Human Rights Council, Zeid Raad al-Hussein said a draft EU-Turkey agreement on handling the migration crisis announced this week raises serious concerns, including "the potential for collective and arbitrary expulsions" from the bloc. Zeid said he hadn't received full details of the draft, but urged the EU "to adopt a much more rights-compliant and humane set of measures on migration at next week's summit."
"Today, in violation of the fundamental principles of solidarity, human dignity, and human rights, the race to repel these people is picking up momentum," he said.
The broad-ranging speech offered the High Commissioner for Human Rights a chance to chronicle an array of concerns, while acknowledging that the United Nations is not a sovereign body and cannot exercise criminal jurisdiction.
Zeid pointed to issues including some 300 reported police killings of African-Americans in the US last year; "signals" that Russia wants to close the UN human rights office there; ongoing violence in Burundi, Syria, Libya, Yemen and South Sudan; and arrests of lawyers and activists in China. He expressed concerns about Turkey's recent actions against the media, including against the Zaman newspaper.
The rights chief also pointed to allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers, especially in the Central African Republic, and noted an "urgent need to stop this appalling abuse by UN and other personnel of victims, some of whom are very young."
However, "only member states can conduct criminal investigations, and prosecute," he said.
