THE annual Human Rights Watch report for 2024, released last week, has flagged the next big threats facing global travel & tourism: The slow boiling-frog death of the rule of law, human rights, freedom, privacy, democracy as well as the right to protest, debate and dissent. For the first time, the HRW report refers to “transactional diplomacy” and “selective outrage” as indicators of the double standards dominating global geopolitics, accompanied by a clear warning of the conflicts that will spawn.
The warning should be heeded in the travel & tourism industry which is exulting in the euphoria of the “recovery” from the Covid-19 catastrophe. Multiple research reports are celebrating the return of tourism to near pre-pandemic levels. Conveniently omitted is any mention of the increasingly fragile and volatile global environment and the multiple man-made risks and threats which threaten stability, safety and security.
The 734-page HRW report, covering nearly 100 countries, clearly blames governments and political leaders for sacrificing human rights, freedom and democracy at the altar of business deals and political expediency.
“Governments have found it easier to disregard human rights issues in the international arena in part because the international community is not challenging their violations of human rights at home. Across regions, autocrats have worked to erode the independence of key institutions vital for protecting human rights and shrink the space for expressions of dissent with the same endgame in mind: to exercise power without constraint.”
It also highlights specific examples of “selective outrage”.
“When governments are vocal in condemning the Israeli government’s war crimes against civilians in Gaza but silent when it comes to Chinese government crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, or demand international prosecution for Russian war crimes in Ukraine while undermining accountability for US abuses in Afghanistan, they weaken the belief in the universality of human rights and the legitimacy of the laws designed to protect them. It sends the message that some people’s dignity is worth protecting, but not everyone’s – that some lives matter more. The ripple effects of these inconsistencies shake the legitimacy of the system of rules that we rely on to protect everyone’s rights.”
“In the US, President Joe Biden has shown little appetite to hold responsible human rights abusers who are key to his domestic agenda or those in China’s sphere of influence. US allies like Saudi Arabia, India, and Egypt continue to violate the rights of their people on a massive scale.
“The EU has circumvented its human rights obligations, pushing asylum seekers and migrants back to other countries or striking deals with abusive governments like Libya and Turkey to keep migrants out. Democratic governments in the Asia-Pacific region, including Japan, South Korea, and Australia consistently deprioritize human rights in the name of assuring military alliances and trade.
“Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India’s democracy has slid toward autocracy, with authorities targeting minorities, tightening repression, and dismantling independent institutions.”
Tirana Hassan, executive director, HRW, said, “Civil society, courts, and human rights commissions are also increasingly under threat by governments that want to exercise power without constraints. And governments are increasingly using technology platforms to silence and censor critics. These threats underline that governments should urgently respect, protect and defend human rights to build thriving and inclusive societies.”
She called for a return to “Principled Diplomacy”.
“Upholding human rights consistently, across the board, no matter who the victims are or where the rights violations are being committed, is the only way to build the world we want to live in, where everyone’s dignity is respected and protected.”
Which makes conflict a certainty, be it local, national, regional or global.
The report is well worth reading by all students of tourism keen to research the relationship between thriving democracies and vibrant travel & tourism industries.
Download the full report here: https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2024
CAPTIONS:
Top: A resident walks amid the rubble of residential buildings after Israeli airstrikes in al-Zahra neighbourhood of Gaza Strip, on Oct. 19, 2023. Photo: Mustafa Hassona/Anadolu via Getty Images and published by Human Rights Watch
First insert: The cover of this year’s Human Rights Watch report.
Second insert: A key point raised in the latest Human Rights Watch report.
Third insert:Members of an opposition political party in Bangladesh try to remove barricades as they join in a mass protest march demanding a free and fair election, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Nov, 15, 2023. Photo: Reuters/Mohammad Ponir Hossain and published by Human Rights Watch
Fourth insert: The 34th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, and the first since Covid-19 restrictions were lifted, was met with heightened police presence, searches, and arrests, in Hong Kong, on June 4, 2023. Photo: Simon Jankowski/NurPhoto via Getty Images and published by Human Rights Watch
Front Page: Journalists and activists hold pictures of murdered journalists during a protest outside the Mexican Interior Ministry building to demand justice for the killing of Mexican journalist Luis Martin Sanchez Iniguez, on July 10, 2023. Photo: Reuters/ Raquel Cunha and published by Human Rights Watch
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