United Nations human rights chief Volker Turk said on Wednesday that his office was in "survival mode" due to major funding cuts from global donors, while rights violations and needs in conflict-affected areas surge.

"Our resources have been slashed, along with funding for human rights organizations – including at the grassroots level – around the world. We are in survival mode," the high commissioner for the UN human rights office (OHCHR) told reporters.

OHCHR has $90 million less in funding than it needed this year, which resulted in 300 job cuts, directly impacting the office's work, Turk said.

"Essential work has had to be cut, including on Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, Tunisia, and other countries at a time when the needs are rising," Turk said.

He said country visits by UN special rapporteurs, who are independent experts, as well as investigative missions by fact-finding bodies, have been reduced, while dialogues with states on their compliance with UN human rights treaties have had to be postponed, with the number of state parties reviews falling to 103 from 145.

UN HIGH Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk appears at the Human Rights Council in Geneva in September. Officials from UN agencies such as the Human Rights Council join in promoting the hypocrisy, singling out Israel, the writer charges.
UN HIGH Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk appears at the Human Rights Council in Geneva in September. Officials from UN agencies such as the Human Rights Council join in promoting the hypocrisy, singling out Israel, the writer charges. (credit: DENIS BALIBOUSE/REUTERS)

'Ripple effects on efforts to protect human rights'

"All this has extensive ripple effects on international and national efforts to protect human rights," Turk said, pointing to grave human rights concerns in Sudan, Gaza, and Ukraine.

"I am extremely worried that we might see in Kordofan a repeat of the atrocities that have been committed in al-Fashir," he said, referring to the conflict in Sudan.

Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces took over Darfur's city of al-Fashir in late October in one of its biggest gains of the two-and-a-half-year war with Sudan's army. This month, advances have continued eastward into the Kordofan region, and they seized the country's biggest oil field.

Russia's increased use of powerful long-range weapons had driven a sharp rise in civilian casualties in Ukraine, with these rising 24% from the same period last year, he said.