UN rights director worries about the emergence of far-right in Europe.

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On Wednesday, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights urged caution in the face of far-right political victories in Europe, citing narratives that dehumanise migrants and asylum seekers.

“We need to be very vigilant because history tells us, particularly in Europe, that vilifying the other, denigrating the other, is a foreshadowing of what’s to come,” Volker Turk told reporters during a news conference in Geneva. “It’s an alarm bell we need to ring.”

Far-right parties gained seats in the European Parliament last month, and France will conduct a run-off election this weekend in which opponents of the country’s far-right, anti-immigrant National Rally want to prevent them from taking power.

As an Austrian, whose country became a hotbed of anti-Semitism in the 1930s and participated in the Holocaust after its annexation by Nazi Germany in 1938, Turk has previously cited a desire to prevent future atrocities as part of his inspiration to run for the top U.N. rights job.

Formerly a senior official at the U.N. refugee agency, Turk fought for years to boost their protections.

“In Europe we have unfortunately seen an increase in hate speech, an increase in discriminatory speech, and it’s important that political leaders are very clear that there should be zero tolerance for hate speech and for any attempt to denigrate others,” he said.

Turk blamed the rise of populist, extremist politics on the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences, including rising living costs, that have “disenfranchised, disillusioned, a large segment of the population.

“The traditional political parties never are self-reflective about how they actually could do their job in order to respond to legitimate grievances that populations and constituencies have,” he added.

Turk, who is nearly half way through his four-year term as U.N. rights chief and whose job is to speak out against attacks on freedoms, said he had hoped to use his position to make an impact on global issues like climate change.

However, he said wars including those in Gaza, Ukraine and Sudan had forced him into “crisis management” mode.

“We have seen the normalisation of things that, frankly, were quite unthinkable, even a couple of years ago,” he said.

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