US Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino (C) walks through a department store in St. Paul, Minnesota, June 10, 2026.
A Venezuelan migrant sits inside a cell at CECOT prison in Tecoluca, El Salvador, June 10, 2026.
The global human rights system is in peril. Under relentless pressure from US President Donald Trump, and persistently undermined by China and Russia, the rules-based international order is being crushed, threatening to take with it the architecture human rights defenders have come to rely on to advance norms and protect freedoms. To defy this trend, governments that still value human rights, alongside social movements, civil society, and international institutions, need to form a strategic alliance to push back.
To be fair, the downward spiral predated Trump’s reelection. The democratic wave that began over 50 years ago has given way to what scholars term a “democratic recession.” Democracy is now back to 1985 levels according to some metrics, with 72 percent of the world’s population now living under autocracy. Russia and China are less free today than 20 years ago. And so is the United States.
Of course, democracy is not a panacea for human rights violations; the US and other longtime democracies have their own histories of colonial crimes, racism, abusive justice systems, and wartime atrocities. More recently, authoritarian leaders have exploited public mistrust and anger to win elections and then dismantled the very institutions that brought them to power. Democratic institutions are crucial to represent the will of the people and keep power in check. It’s no surprise that whenever democracy is undermined, rights are too, as evident in recent years in India, Türkiye, the Philippines, El Salvador, and Hungary.
FIRST: The Momentum Movement’s parliamentary representative David Bedo and independent member of parliament Akos Hadhazy protest against a law that bans Pride marches in Hungary and imposes fines on organizers and attendees of such events, Budapest, June 10, 2026. © 2025 Marton Monus/Reuters; SECOND: University students confront riot police in Istanbul’s Beşiktaş district following the arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu, June 10, 2026. © 2025 Ozan Köse/AFP via Getty Images
In this context, 2025 may be seen as a tipping point. In just 12 months, the Trump administration has carried out a broad assault on key pillars of US democracy and the global rules-based order, which the US, despite inconsistencies, was, with other states, instrumental in helping to establish.
In short order, Trump’s second-term administration has undermined trust in the sanctity of elections, reduced government accountability, gutted food assistance and healthcare subsidies, attacked judicial independence, defied court orders, rolled back women’s rights, obstructed access to abortion care, undermined remedies for racial harm, terminated programs mandating accessibility for people with disabilities, punished free speech, stripped protections from trans and intersex people, eroded privacy, and used government power to intimidate political opponents, the media, law firms, universities, civil society, and even comedians.
Claiming a risk of “civilizational erasure” in Europe and leaning on racist tropes to cast entire populations as unwelcome in the US, the Trump administration has embraced policies and rhetoric that align with white nationalist ideology. Immigrants and asylum seekers have been subjected to inhumane conditions and degrading treatment; 32 died in US Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody in 2025, and as of mid-January 2026, an additional 4 have died. Masked immigration enforcement agents have targeted people of color, using excessive force, terrorizing communities, wrongfully arresting scores of citizens, and, most recently, unjustifiably killing two people in Minneapolis, whose deaths Human Rights Watch has documented.
The US president of course has the authority to tighten US borders and enforce stricter immigration policies. The administration is not, however, entitled to deny legal process to asylum seekers, mistreat undocumented migrants, or unlawfully discriminate. In a well-functioning democracy, no electoral mandate should supersede domestic legislation, constitutional protections, or international human rights law. Trump’s team has repeatedly bypassed these guardrails.
The violations have not stopped at the border. The Trump administration used a 1798 law to send hundreds of Venezuelan migrants to an infamous prison in El Salvador, where they were tortured and sexually abused. Its blatantly unlawful strikes on boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific extrajudicially killed more than 120 people whom Trump claims were drug traffickers.
US Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino (C) walks through a department store in St. Paul, Minnesota, June 10, 2026.
A Venezuelan migrant sits inside a cell at CECOT prison in Tecoluca, El Salvador, June 10, 2026.
After the US attacked Venezuela and apprehended its president, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, Trump claimed the US would “run” the country and control its vast oil reserves. Despite paying lip service to human rights concerns under Maduro at the United Nations, Trump has worked with the same repressive apparatus to further US interests. Many Western allies have chosen to stay silent about these lawless moves, perhaps fearing erratic tariffs and blowback to their alliances.
Trump’s foreign policy has upended the foundations of the rules-based order that seeks to advance democracy and human rights, even if imperfectly.
Trump has boasted that he doesn’t “need international law” as a constraint, only his “own morality.” His administration has politicized the US State Department’s annual human rights report, stepped away from the global prohibition on antipersonnel landmines, voiced support for rewriting international rules on asylum, and skipped the UN’s Universal Periodic Review of the US’ human rights record.
His administration withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council and the World Health Organization and plans to quit 66 international organizations and programs that it describes as part of an “outdated model of multilateralism,” including key forums for climate negotiations. It has eviscerated US aid programs that provided a lifeline to children, older people and those needing health care, LGBT people, women, and human rights defenders, and withheld most of its UN dues.
Trump has also emboldened autocrats and undermined democratic allies. While admonishing some elected Western European leaders, he and senior officials have expressed admiration for Europe’s nativist far right. He has favored autocrats such as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Türkiye’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele, while continuing decades of US support to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
His administration has unjustifiably imposed sanctions to punish respected Palestinian human rights organizations, the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) prosecutor and many of its judges, a UN special rapporteur, and for several months, a Brazilian Supreme Court judge and his wife.
The institutional response in the US to Trump’s power grabs has been shockingly muted. Much of Congress, controlled by his own party, has not challenged his supercharged expansion of executive power. The leaders of the US’ most powerful technology companies have made significant donations and sought to placate the president. Some big law firms and prestigious universities have made deals rather than assert their independence, and some media organizations seem afraid to attract the president’s ire.
Has the US switched sides on the human rights playing field? While US engagement with human rights institutions has always been selective, China and Russia have long pursued an illiberal agenda. They stand much to gain from a US government that now expresses open hostility to universal rights. China and Russia remain strategic rivals of the US, but all three countries are now led by leaders who share open disdain for norms and institutions that could constrain their power.
Police detain an activist outside the State Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament, before lawmakers approved a bill that punishes online searches for information that is deemed “extremist,” in Moscow, June 10, 2026.
Together, they wield considerable economic, military, and diplomatic power. If they were to consistently act as allies of convenience to erode global rules, they could threaten the entire system. Already, a loose international network of countries such as North Korea, Iran, Venezuela, Myanmar, Cuba, and Belarus work in concert with Russia and China. These leaders share very little ideologically but align in undermining human rights and promoting a regressive international agenda. In word and in practice, the US government is now helping them in this endeavor.
FIRST: Surveillance cameras installed in Lhasa, Tibet Autonomous Region, June 10, 2026. © 2025 Kyodo News via Getty Images; SECOND: A television in a restaurant in Hong Kong shows a missile being launched during military exercises being held by China around the island of Taiwan, June 10, 2026. © 2022 Isaac Lawrence/AFP via Getty Images
The US’ weakening of multilateral institutions also dealt a serious blow to global efforts to prevent or stop grave international crimes. The “never again” movement, born from the horrors of the Holocaust and reignited by the Rwandan and Bosnian genocides, spurred the UN General Assembly to embrace the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) in 2005. Meant to guide international intervention to prevent and stop atrocities in tandem with efforts to prosecute and punish serious crimes, R2P made a real difference in places like the Central African Republic and Kenya.
Today, R2P is rarely invoked and the ICC is under siege. In addition to Trump’s far-reaching sanctions, in December 2025 a Moscow court sentenced the ICC prosecutor and eight of its judges to prison terms in absentia. Moreover, despite being ICC fugitives, in 2025, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin was welcomed by Donald Trump in Alaska, and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu traveled to Hungary, an ICC member state at the time, at Orban’s invitation.
Twenty years ago, the US government and civil society were instrumental in galvanizing a response to mass atrocities in Darfur. Sudan is burning again, but this time under Trump, with relative impunity. Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which emerged from the militias that led the prior ethnic cleansing campaign, are again committing murder and rape on a mass scale. A growing body of evidence indicates that the UAE, a longtime US ally that recently made multi-billion-dollar deals with Trump, is providing the RSF with military support.
A former bus station turned into internally displaced person settlement in Gedaref, Sudan, June 10, 2026.
In the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the Israeli armed forces have committed acts of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity, killing over 70,000 people since the October 2023 Hamas-led attacks on Israel and displacing the vast majority of Gaza’s population. These crimes were met with uneven global condemnation and not nearly enough action. Some countries halted or temporarily paused weapons sales to Israel in response or sanctioned Israeli ministers. Trump, however, continued a long-standing US policy of almost unconditional support to Israel, even as the International Court of Justice is weighing allegations of genocide and has issued binding orders under the Genocide Convention to protect Palestinians’ rights.
Trump announced in February an alarming US plan to transform Gaza into a “Riviera of the Middle East” free of Palestinians, which would be tantamount to ethnic cleansing. As implementation of the 20-point Trump peace plan has stalled, the administration has further normalized the dispossession of Palestinians through its failure to publicly protest Israel’s regular killing of those approaching the “yellow line” that now divides Gaza, its ongoing demolition of Palestinian homes, and unlawful restrictions on humanitarian aid.
FIRST: A Palestinian girl stands amidst rubble in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip, June 10, 2026. © 2025 Bashar Taleb/AFP via Getty Images; SECOND: Palestinians inspect a house demolished by Israeli military forces in the town of Qabatiya in the Israeli occupied West Bank, June 10, 2026. © 2025 Nasser Ishtayeh/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
In Ukraine, Trump’s peace efforts have consistently downplayed Russia’s responsibility for serious violations. These include indiscriminate bombing, coercing Ukrainians in occupied areas to serve in the Russian military, systematic torture of Ukrainian prisoners of war, the abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia, and the use of quadcopter drones to hunt and kill civilians. Rather than applying meaningful pressure on Putin to end these crimes, Trump publicly berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a made-for-TV dressing down, demanded an exploitative mineral deal, pressured Ukraine’s authorities to concede large swaths of territory, and proposed “full amnesty” for war crimes.
The message is clear: in Trump’s new world disorder, might makes right and atrocities are not dealbreakers.
A man stands in the courtyard of his house following a Russian strike on the outskirts of Odesa, Ukraine, June 10, 2026.
의미는 고유함과 여백, 정서와 감각입니다. Official on decem new arrival escape mug series ver. 100 likes, 0 comments walgvogel. _ to little art collector 아주 희소성 있는 6090.
발그보겔 에서 구매 hole 볼캡처럼 정말 레어한 제품 90년대 빈티지 볼캡 특유의 높은 고지에 핏이 예술입니다 특히나 아트윅은 더 말할나위없습니다. 발그보겔 스토어의 첫번째 전시 escape는 일러스트레이터 cauchemar magazine과 함께합니다, Buy 90s vintage band hoodie soundgarden on bunjang without korean account. 7 cm 180 pages _ walgvogel artbook collection 06. Une belle journée avec mon meilleur ami anto à paris. Com › walgvogelwalgvogel 발그보겔 @walgvogel, Com › walgvogelwalgvogel 발그보겔 @walgvogel. 발그보겔 creazione di adamo parody clean needles save lives 90s vintage tshirt, 감각적인 소품을 찾는다면 디자이너 김민이 운영하는 소품 숍 발그보겔walgvogel이 기존 온라인 숍으로만 운영하다가 드디어 오프라인 매장을 열었다. Walgvogel의 실시간 인기 위시템. Io › items › 155388발그보겔 candle holder coral reef delàon, korea 2021 위시버, 싱그러운 여름에 어울리는 8가지 아이템으로 일상을 풍요롭게 만들어볼까요, He is teaching sofia and me how to make techno music. 최고고르르르 전시투어코슈마매거진 발그보겔.Com › stories › walgvogelwatch this story by walgvogel 발그보겔 on instagram before, _ 밤낮없이 뜨거운 가마들이 가동 중입니다, Market 테이블웨어, 가구, 패션 액세서리, 홈 패브릭 등, Likes, 0 comments walgvogel. Buy 90s vintage rap tee cypress hill on bunjang without korean account.
추후에 로도스 세라믹에 대해서 자세히 포스팅해보도록 할께요, The most important core value of this is not to collect creations according to the times, Buy 00s vintage stussy hoodie zipup l on bunjang without korean account. He is also a techno lover.
Likes, 0 comments walgvogel 발그보겔 @walgvogel.. Com › 7969148291빈티지 정가품 구분 조또 몬하는 사람들을 위한 믿을만한 패션 에..
| 온라인으로 만나는 감각적인 편집숍 12 ②. | Official love craftsmanship & vintage vintage 빈티지 문의 @walgvogel. | What a delightful discovery. | Une belle journée avec mon meilleur ami anto à paris. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare vintages & art object, walgvogel store. | 전시투어🔍 에서 하는 코슈마씨 전시를 다녀왔다. | By peter campus 1937 _ petercampusvideoartvideoartistnewmediaart walgvogelwalgvogelarchiveartarchives. | 소소하게 변해가는 칼라풀한 저희 집의 이모저모를 보여 read more. |
| 187 likes, 0 comments walgvogel. | Official on ma coming soon. | Com › product › 2relq90s 빈티지 밴드모자 식오브잇올 sickofitall 후루츠패밀리. | Buy 00s vintage stussy hoodie zipup l on bunjang without korean account. |
Summer fountain ⛲️ 이 더위는 익숙해지지 않아요, Likes, 1 comments walgvogel, 5 발그보겔 구매 제품 이쁩니다 스타일 달라져서 판매합니다, Official on j raawii 재입고 알림 오랜시간. 10k followers, 3,273 following, 151 posts see instagram photos and videos from walgvogel 발그보겔 @walgvogel.
Official instagram photos. _ 굳은 설탕 덩어리 같은 반투명하면서 빛나는 독특한 질감과 파스텔 톤의 아름다운 색감의 페인팅, 전시투어 에서 하는 코슈마씨 전시를 다녀왔다. Official on instagram how gur is made gur의 탄생 과정.
Market 테이블웨어, 가구, 패션 액세서리, 홈 패브릭 등, _ gur porto, portugal illustration by saran yen panya. You all know this, right, No more difficult proxy purchase on your way. Official love craftsmanship & vintage vintage 빈티지 문의 @walgvogel.
Antonin is painting my drunken face, 152 likes, 0 comments walgvogel. 발그보겔은 멸종된 도도새를 일컫는 독일어다, _ ceramic, stonware handcrafted by ini ceramique 프랑스 부르고뉴의 아름다운 작업실에서 프랑스에서 현대 예술을 전공한 후 도예에 대해 흥미를 가지게 된 마인희inhee ma 작가가 만든 이니세라믹ini ceramique의 아름다운 화병을 발그보겔.
흑수들이여 답하라 리메인즈홈 칼라풀 빈티지 인테리어 온라인 집들이. Likes, 1 comments walgvogel. Com › product › 2relq90s 빈티지 밴드모자 식오브잇올 sickofitall 후루츠패밀리. Com 세계 곳곳에서 수집한 공예품과 오브제, 사진 등을 판매하는 온라인 콘셉트 스토어. 아주 얇은 유리잔에 담긴 물을 건네받았을 때의 차갑고 촉촉한 느낌과 조심스러움이 더해져 더욱 가슴이 뛰는. 황하나 근황 디시
히 티드 라이벌 리 보는 곳 You all know this, right. 의미는 고유함과 여백, 정서와 감각입니다. 152 likes, 0 comments walgvogel. 발그보겔은 이렇게 일상을 변화시키는 감각적인 아이템을 선보인다. 187 likes, 0 comments walgvogel. 후타바 포포 야동
히토미 모바일 디시 _ 포르투갈 포르토 porto에 위치ᄒ. Official on j walgvogel archive tomoe adachi _ glass artist okayama, japan 발그보겔 스토어에서도 소개했던 너무 좋아하는 글라스 아티스트 tomoe adachi의 작품들을 소개합니다. 전시투어 에서 하는 코슈마씨 전시를 다녀왔다. Com › vintage_bottombottom walgvogel 발그보겔. 588 likes, 0 comments walgvogel 발그보겔 @walgvogel. 흑인 예쁜 여자
흑형닷컴 원피스 Likes, 1 comments _x_ceramic on novem 안녕하세요, x vintage 엑스 빈티지의 첫번째 팝업스토어에 초대합니다. Official love craftsmanship & vintage vintage 빈티지 문의 @walgvogel. 발그보겔은 멸종된 도도새를 일컫는 독일어인데요. The most important core value of this is not to collect creations according to the times. Likes, 1 comments _x_ceramic on novem 안녕하세요, x vintage 엑스 빈티지의 첫번째 팝업스토어에 초대합니다.
후쿠다 유아 품번 Com › vintage_bottombottom walgvogel 발그보겔. 영국 런던에 위치한 hannah simpson의 스튜디오에서 탄생하는 생동감 넘치는 컬러와 패턴을 가진 이 몬스터들은. 12월, 사랑스러운 악몽들의 세상으로 당신을 초대합니다. Com › stories › walgvogelwatch this story by walgvogel 발그보겔 on instagram before. Walgvogel의 실시간 인기 위시템.
Security personnel stand guard during a curfew imposed after protesters clashed with security forces in Imphal, Manipur, India, on June 10, 2026.
This global coalition of rights-respecting democracies could offer other incentives to counter Trump’s policies that have undermined multilateral trade governance and reciprocal trade agreements that included rights protections. Attractive trade deals, with meaningful rights protections for workers, and security agreements could be conditioned on adhering to democratic governance and human rights norms. Democracy already comes with benefits. While autocracies have generally fostered conflict, economic stagnation, or kleptocracy, as evidenced in multiple academic studies, including the work of the Nobel Prize-winning economist Daron Acemoglu, democratic institutions reliably yield economic growth.
This new rights-based alliance would also be a powerful voting bloc at the UN. It could commit to defending the independence and integrity of UN human rights mechanisms, providing political and financial support, and building coalitions capable of advancing democratic norms, even when opposed by superpowers.
Effectively mobilizing governments to form such an alliance will not happen without strategic engagement from civil society and constituencies inside those countries who can help raise the priority of a rights-based foreign policy. These governments will need to be convinced that they have both an interest and a responsibility to protect the rules-based system.
Projects of this nature are bubbling up. Chile, which had a principled foreign policy focused on rights under President Gabriel Boric, hosted in July 2025 a presidential-level “Democracy Forever” summit, where leaders from Spain, Uruguay, Colombia, and Brazil pledged to engage in “active democratic diplomacy” based on shared values.
The Hague Group, led by Malaysia, South Africa, and Colombia, formed in January 2025 in “defense of international law” and in solidarity with Palestinians. Over 70 countries from all regions signed a joint statement defending multilateralism at the UN. Earlier, in 2017, former Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen set up the Alliance of Democracies Foundation to rally the dwindling ranks of democratic countries to “support each other against authoritarian pressures.”
Whatever its precise contours, an alliance of rights-respecting democracies would offer a hopeful counterpoint to the authoritarian trope of China’s and Russia’s leaders standing alongside North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, observing military hardware in a parade in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in September. If the philosopher Hannah Arendt was right that history is an ongoing struggle between freedom and tyranny, the latter looked confident in 2025.
Yet, even in the worst of times, the idea of freedom and human rights is enduring. People power remains an engine for change. In the US, “No Kings” marches have drawn millions, protesters in Chicago, Minneapolis, Los Angeles, and around the country have stood up against the deployment of the National Guard and ICE abuses, and students are still organizing for Palestine on university campuses despite draconian crackdowns and visa revocations.
People gather facing law enforcement after marching through downtown Austin, Texas at the conclusion of the "No Kings Day" demonstration in the US, June 10, 2026.
Buoyed by popular resistance, South Korean parliamentarians impeached their president to prevent him from grabbing power through martial law. Grassroots aid efforts by Sudan’s emergency response rooms, Hong Kong’s fire relief, Sri Lanka’s cyclone relief community kitchens, and Ukrainian mutual aid and solidarity collectives represent the best of this trend.
In 2025, Gen Z protests against corruption, inadequate public services, and poor governance in Nepal, Indonesia, and Morocco brought to the forefront the need for governments to listen to their youth and tackle corruption and inequality. But as the difficulties of restoring rights in Bangladesh after years under an authoritarian government illustrates, gains won through public mobilization can easily be lost unless democratic participation and free expression remain unassailable.
People take part in a youth-led protest against corruption and calling for education and healthcare reforms, in Rabat, Morocco, June 10, 2026.
Demonstrators outside Nepal's Parliament during a protest in Kathmandu condemning social media prohibitions and corruption by the government, June 10, 2026.
In this more hostile world, civil society is more critical than ever. It’s also increasingly endangered, particularly in an environment where funding is scarce. In 2025, Human Rights Watch was labeled “undesirable” and banned from operating in Russia. For partners in Egypt, Hong Kong, and India, these tactics are all too familiar. Restrictions on civil society and protest have become more commonplace in Europe, including the UK and France. And now, for the first time, many worry about risks associated with their operational presence in the US, where the Open Society Foundations, a major donor, have already been threatened, and the administration is preparing a list of “domestic terrorists” under overbroad guidance that could be interpreted to include the work of many progressive groups.
Breaking the authoritarian wave and standing up for human rights is a generational challenge. In 2026, it will play out most acutely in the US, with far-reaching consequences for the rest of the world. Fighting back will require a determined, strategic, and coordinated reaction from voters, civil society, multilateral institutions, and rights-respecting governments around the globe.
4월 1일은 옛날 옛적 신년의 시작인 3월 25일을 기준으로 열리는 춘분제의 마지막 날인데요, 이 날은 사랑하는 사람들이 서로 선물을 주고., Human Rights Watch’s 36th annual review of human rights practices and trends around the globe, reviews developments in more than 100 countries.