Former UN human rights chief on Trump, populism, complacency toward war crimes
By Trudy Rubin The Philadelphia Inquirer How do you lead a fight for human rights in a world where mass slaughter of civilians goes unpunished, where populists and autocrats are rising — and where the United States no longer leads a global pushback against human rights crimes? This is what I asked Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, a most unusual man who recently stepped down from four years as United Nations