The internal revolt at the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) marks a critical juncture in the international response to the Gaza crisis. Hundreds of staff members are urging leadership to declare Israel's offensive a genocide, arguing that the UN's credibility is at stake if it remains silent any longer. This unprecedented demand reflects profound frustration over the scale of suffering in Gaza and the international community's failure to stop it. With over 63,000 Palestinians killed, mostly civilians, and famine ravaging the population, the OHCHR's own experts warn that conditions are increasingly incompatible with Palestinian survival.
The term "genocide" carries legal and historical weight, and the OHCHR has historically been cautious in its use. H