Cuts to sign language and interpretation spark pushback at UN rights council - Geneva Solutions | Metaglossia: The Translation World | Scoop.it

"Countries at the UN rights body protested a decision to suspend accessibility and limit interpretation services for meetings as the UN struggles with a liquidity crunch.


 


The United Nations’ financial troubles look set to continue wreaking havoc in Geneva this year. Meeting times are being sliced, speakers' time cut short, while travel restrictions and the hiring freeze remain in place.


 


Weeks away from its first regular session of the year, the Human Rights Council approved on Monday another round of cost-cutting measures – the third year in a row. The move is driven by a widening financial gap caused mainly by the US, but also by other states failing to pay their dues on time.


 


Measures include cutting back meeting time by 10 per cent, including by placing a cap on speakers’ interventions of one and a half minutes. But one decision taken by the UN secretariat drew particular outcry.


 


‘This is exclusion’


Monica Varela García, chief of the interpretation service at the UN Geneva Office’s division of conference management, told member states at the meeting that the UN would not be providing accessibility services and would scale back interpretation and translation until further notice.


 


The UN typically offers interpretation for international sign language and live captioning for videos, which allow people with disabilities to follow and take part in the council’s discussions.


 


The measures prompted pushback from a range of states, including Mexico, New Zealand, Canada, Spain, Japan and Thailand.


 


“If there is no accessibility for interactive dialogues and panels on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities here in the Human Rights Council, this is exclusion,” said Spanish ambassador to the UN, Marcos Gómez Martínez. “A lack of accessibility for an important segment of the population is entirely unacceptable.”


 


Mexico’s ambassador, Francisca Méndez Escobar, also called for multilingualism and the six official languages – a foundational principle of the United Nations – to be upheld.


 


Calling it an “unprecedented situation”, Varela García said her office had received no funds at all for non-post costs, which total $27 million*. That includes sign language interpretation, which relies entirely on external hires, and backup for translation and interpretation during intense periods.


 


“Staff capacity in the division of conference management is insufficient to meet mandated activities,” she said, noting that her division was already struggling after losing 90 posts during last year’s budget cut.


 


Asked if technology alternatives had been considered, Varela García replied that the human-centred communication remained key in such settings where “trustworthiness, understanding and clarity are crucial”.


 


The council president, Indonesia’s ambassador, Sidharto Reza Suryodipuro, said he would send a letter to UN chief António Guterres, “requesting that accessibility services be provided”.


 


Investigations hampered


The human rights work that underpins the diplomatic agenda is also taking a hit this year. Nada Al-Nashif, deputy high commissioner for human rights, whose office is in charge of overseeing tasks of the council, painted a bleak picture. “The liquidity crisis has affected every aspect of our work. All mandated activities, both thematic and country-specific, have been and will continue to be delivered in a significantly reduced form,” she said at the meeting.


 


The UN Human Rights Office has only received 20 per cent of its UN budget allocation from New York to last until April, she added. This year’s budget was already $25m less than last year’s, following a 16 per cent cut proposed by Guterres and taken up by states late last year.


 


Al-Nashif also said a technical advisory body to the UN’s budget committee, comprised of member states in New York, had recommended further cuts, bringing the number of abolished posts to 117. The committee also rejected seven of the 11 new posts requested to carry out mandates assigned by member states themselves. The body has been accused of blocking human rights work by refusing to grant the necessary resources.


 


Among the initiatives affected, according to Al-Nashif, are a working group set up to craft a new treaty on the rights of older people, work on the human rights impact of sea level rise and another one aimed at fighting inequality through the promotion of economic, social and cultural rights.


 


Budget cuts have also meant most temporary staff – on whom the office relies heavily – have seen their contracts expire, further straining the workforce.


 


“The UN’s already meagre budget for human rights has been further slashed while human rights crises continue to grow globally,” Raphael Viana David, programme manager at the International Service for Human Rights, said reacting to the budget cuts in a statement last month.


 


The financial crunch continues to strain experts mandated by the council to monitor and report back on rights abuses across countries and thematic topics. Investigative bodies, according to Al-Nashif, are operating at staffing levels of 60 per cent or lower.


 


Some of the bodies have seen a tangible impact on their work. The Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territories was unable to deliver three reports over the last year whose mandates have now expired and would require new resolutions for them to carry over, she said.


 


A commission requested by the Democratic Republic of the Congo to investigate violations in the war-torn east of the country is also still having trouble getting off the ground despite initial steps to begin operations.


 


Al-Nashif also noted that the new investigative mechanism on Afghanistan, established last summer with a voluntary trust fund, had yet to receive any donations.


 


Special rapporteurs will be limited to one country visit per year, as last year, though without translation services, which Varela García said are needed in the majority of countries.


 


Last week, UN rights chief Volker Türk said his office was “in survival mode”. He launched a $400m appeal for voluntary donations for 2026 – $100m less than the previous year.


 


*This article has been updated with the correct figures regarding the amount allocated for non-post funds cited by the Division of Conference Management


Published on February 09, 2026 17:58. / Updated on February 10, 2026 12:25.


Cuts to sign language and interpretation spark pushback at UN rights council


By Michelle Langrand


https://genevasolutions.news/human-rights/cuts-to-sign-language-and-interpretation-spark-pushback-at-un-rights-council


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