At the opening of the Human Rights Council session in Geneva, UN Secretary-General António Guterres delivered a stark warning about the global erosion of human rights. The council's 20th anniversary is marked by significant geopolitical tensions and financial pressures on the UN.

"Human rights are under total attack around the world."
"Incandescent threats are being thrown at sovereign nations, with no regard for the fire they might ignite."
Human rights are facing a "total attack" worldwide. This was the thunderous declaration from UN Secretary-General António Guterres as he opened the Human Rights Council in Geneva, marking its 20th anniversary not with celebration, but with a dire warning. The erosion of the rule of law is no longer subtle; it is happening in plain sight, executed with "pride" by those wielding the most power.
Guterres did not mince words, condemning the normalization of force over law. "Do not let this erosion of human rights be the price of political expediency," he urged member states. This session, taking place under the shadow of a potential successor taking his place next year, represents a critical juncture. The Secretary-General's message is clear: the assaults on fundamental freedoms are deliberate, systematic, and accelerating. As the Council convenes, the very architecture of international law is buckling under the weight of impunity.
The diplomatic gloves are off. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk unleashed a blistering critique of the current geopolitical landscape, describing an "unprecedented" competition for power and resources not seen since World War II. In a thinly veiled rebuke of US President Donald Trump, Türk warned that "incandescent threats are being thrown at sovereign nations," risking catastrophic conflagrations.
The Council floor has become a battleground. Tensions are skyrocketing as major powers trade barbs while conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza, and Sudan rage on. Türk's alarm over the "fire they might ignite" underscores the fragility of the current order. This is not merely diplomatic posturing; it is a dangerous escalation where human rights are becoming collateral damage in a high-stakes game of dominance. The message from the High Commissioner is urgent: the aggressive rhetoric from world leaders is fueling a volatile environment where international norms are being incinerated.
The United Nations is staring into the abyss of an "imminent financial collapse." In a shocking revelation of fiscal negligence, only 69 of the 193 member states have paid their dues for 2026. Neither the United States nor China—the organization's two largest bankrollers—are among them. This liquidity crisis has forced a staggering 16% slash to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights' budget, dropping it to $624.3 million.
The consequences are immediate and severe. The current Council session has been forcibly shortened from six weeks to five and a half. Interpretation services are being disrupted, and the hybrid participation models that allowed civil society to engage remotely have been scrapped to save cash. Indonesian Ambassador Sidharto Reza Suryodipuro, President of the Council, admits this session will "test the ability" of the body to function under extreme duress. The UN is being starved of resources at the exact moment the world needs it most.
"We cannot do everything." With characteristic Swiss realism, Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis cut through the lofty rhetoric to deliver a hard truth. Confronted with "limitless" expectations and shrinking resources, Switzerland is calling for a ruthless prioritization of efforts. Cassis insists that the international community must refocus on the rights that are most critically threatened, rather than diluting impact across too many fronts.
To combat this paralysis, Cassis announced the launch of a "Global Alliance for Human Rights" in the coming weeks. This initiative aims to establish clear responsibilities and demand concrete action where it matters most. For Switzerland, the path forward isn't about grandstanding; it's about the protection of individuals and fundamental freedoms through targeted, effective diplomacy. While the UN grapples with bankruptcy, Bern is maneuvering to ensure that the core mission of human rights protection survives the storm.
The most alarming casualty of this financial crisis is justice itself. Critical fact-finding missions are grinding to a halt because the checkbook is empty. A commission of inquiry into abuses in the Democratic Republic of Congo, voted for in February 2025, has yet to begin its work solely due to a lack of cash. Similarly, the investigative mechanism for Afghanistan remains paralyzed.
This is the real-world cost of the UN's liquidity crunch: war crimes go undocumented, and perpetrators operate with zero fear of accountability. NGOs are sounding the alarm, noting that the removal of remote access shuts out the very activists who are most at risk. As the Council celebrates its 20th year, it faces a humiliating reality—it has the mandate to act, but not the money. For the victims in Sudan, Ukraine, and the DRC, the silence from Geneva is deafening.