UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has urged the
international community to prevent genocide instead of just reacting to it.
"Genocide does not happen by accident; it is
deliberate, with warning signs and precursors,” he said yesterday while
speaking on the occasion of the International Day of Commemoration and Dignity
of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide and of the Prevention of this Crime
2018.
"Often it is the culmination of years of exclusion,
denial of human rights and other wrongs. Since genocide can take place in times
of war and in times of peace, we must be ever-vigilant," he said.
Mentioning the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, Guterres
said he was extremely concerned about the plight of the Rohingya Muslims, some
of whom were “systemically killed, tortured, raped and burnt alive.”
He would never forget the bone-chilling accounts he heard
from the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh earlier this year, he added.
"My generation believed that after the Holocaust, we
would never see genocide again. We were wrong.
“Modernity does not protect us from genocide. The digital
age does not protect us from genocide. Nothing but our own actions, based on
our values and principles, can protect us from genocide. The Genocide
Convention offers an essential legal framework for our efforts."
The International Day, which was established by the UN
General Assembly in 2015, has since been observed annually on December 9, to
mark the adoption of the Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide.