R2P in Focus

R2P in Focus is a monthly publication from the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect designed to highlight recent events and political developments concerning the Responsibility to Protect (R2P).

The Future of Civilian Protection in Peace Operations: Endorsing and Implementing the Kigali Principles

The Kigali Principles on the Protection of Civilians, adopted during 2015, are a set of eighteen recommendations to improve the implementation of protective mandates in UN peace operations. The Principles provide a blueprint to strengthen the effectiveness of peacekeeping operations conducted in volatile and violent situations.

On 11 May 2016 the Governments of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Republic of Rwanda, in association with the Global Centre, co-hosted a high-level event on “The Future of Civilian Protection in Peace Operations: Endorsing and Implementing the Kigali Principles” at UN Headquarters in New York. The meeting was launched by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands, H.E. Mr. Albert Koenders, and the Permanent Representative of Rwanda to the UN, H.E. Mr. Eugène-Richard Gasana. Other speakers included the President of the UN General Assembly, H.E. Mr. Mogens Lykketoft, and the Permanent Representative of the United States to the UN, H.E. Ms. Samantha Power, as well as former UN Force Commander Lt. General Carlos Alberto dos Santos Cruz and Executive Director of Security Council Report Mr. Ian Martin. The event was moderated by the Global Centre’s Executive Director, Dr. Simon Adams.

In his closing remarks, Dr. Adams urged all member states to support the Kigali Principles: “In far too many situations in the world today, peacekeepers in blue helmets are all that stand between civilians and those who prey upon their misery. The Kigali Principles recognize that the protection of civilians is at the heart of twenty-first century peacekeeping. They should be endorsed by all UN member states.”

The event was covered in the New York Times, Daily Telegraph (UK) and a number of other international media outlets.

For more information on this event see our Peacekeeping and Kigali Principles page.

World Humanitarian Summit

From 23 to 24 May the Global Centre is attending the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, Turkey. Executive Director Dr. Simon Adams will be moderating a side event, “Security Council Action in the Service of Humanity,” hosted by the Foreign Minister of Liechtenstein, and is also speaking at a number of other side events during the Summit.

In advance of the Summit, the Global Centre collaborated with The Elders and Amnesty International on a video message which calls upon the UN Security Council to take action to prevent and halt mass atrocities by agreeing to voluntarily restrain from using their veto and adopting a Code of Conduct.

Sixth Annual Meeting of the Global Network of R2P Focal Points

The sixth annual meeting of the Global Network of R2P Focal Points will be held in Seoul from 20 to 22 June 2016. The Government of the Republic of Korea is hosting the meeting in collaboration with the Global Centre. Topics of discussion will include how R2P Focal Points can influence the development of national human rights mechanisms and linkages between development aid and atrocity prevention, among others.

Any Other Business

  • Statement on the situation in Syria. The Global Centre responded to the recent airstrikes on displaced civilians and hospitals in Syria in a statement availablehere.
  • Glion Human Rights Dialogue. On 3 and 4 May Deputy Executive Director Ms. Savita Pawnday participated in the Glion Human Rights Dialogue in Switzerland. Ms. Pawnday presented on the role of the Human Rights Council in the prevention of mass atrocity crimes.
  • Strengthening South-South Cooperation to Prevent Mass Atrocities. The Global Centre co-hosted a workshop with the Department of International Relations and Cooperation of South Africa and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sweden, bringing together practitioners from the Global South to address the ongoing gaps between early warning and timely action in responding to mass atrocity crimes. A summary is available here.
  • UN Perspectives: The Future of Civilian Protection and the Responsibility to Protect. Motivated by the need to address the unprecedented challenges facing the UN, the Global Centre, in partnership with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sweden, hosted a workshop on the “Future of Civilian Protection and the Responsibility to Protect.” A summary is available here.

Calendar Highlights

29 May 2016

International Day of UN Peacekeepers

20 June 2016

World Refugee Day

Connect With Us

Author: Impunity Watch Archive