Title: Human Rights Are Being Liquidated: War, Corporate Power, And The Architecture Of Violence
Press Release: Veritas Press C.I.C.
Author: Kamran Faqir
Article Date Published: 26 Dec 2025 at 15:00 GMT
Category: World| Investigations-Human Rights | Human Rights Are Being Liquidated: War, Corporate Power, And The Architecture Of Violence
Source(s): Veritas Press C.I.C. | Multi News Agencies
Website: www.veritaspress.co.uk

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This is not a failure of the system.
This is the system.
Across the world, human rights are being systematically dismantled not by accident, but by design, through war, corporate greed, and state-corporate collusion. Behind the language of “security,” “development,” and “stability” lies a brutal reality: land is seized, populations are displaced, civilians are killed, and entire regions are rendered disposable in the pursuit of profit and geopolitical dominance.
Human rights violations today are not merely committed by states. They are engineered by corporations, protected by bureaucrats, enforced by private armies, and justified by political elites.
War For Profit: The Arms Industry As A Human Rights Engine
Modern warfare is not only political, but it is also commercial.
Global arms manufacturers have transformed conflict into a permanent revenue stream. Companies such as Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems, Raytheon (RTX), Boeing, Elbit Systems, and Thales supply weapons used in wars that have resulted in mass civilian casualties, infrastructure destruction, and forced displacement, particularly in the Middle East.
The war in Gaza, the devastation of Yemen, and the destruction of cities in Iraq and Syria have been conducted with weapons supplied by Western arms firms, licensed and defended by governments that simultaneously claim to champion human rights. Civilian deaths are rebranded as “collateral damage,” while arms exports continue uninterrupted.
This is not negligence. It is intent.
When states knowingly arm forces accused by human rights organisations of war crimes—and then block accountability—they become complicit. Arms companies profit, politicians posture, and civilians pay with their lives.
Fossil Fuels, Blood, And Displacement:
The fossil fuel industry has long relied on violence, repression, and corruption to secure access to land and resources.
Oil and gas giants such as Shell, BP, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Blackrock, Halliburton, and TotalEnergies have been repeatedly linked, through court cases, investigative journalism, and NGO reports, to environmental devastation, forced displacement, and human rights abuses, particularly in the Global South.
In the Niger Delta, decades of oil extraction have poisoned land and water, while communities resisting exploitation have faced violent repression. In Iraq and Syria, energy infrastructure has been both a strategic military target and a post-war corporate prize. In Palestine, control over land, water, and offshore gas fields is inseparable from military occupation and siege.
Fossil fuel extraction does not merely destroy the climate; it destroys communities. When people are displaced, criminalised, or killed for standing in the way of pipelines and drilling sites, this is not development. It is corporate violence.
Mining, Land Grabs, And The Elimination Of Indigenous Resistance:
The global mining industry operates through dispossession.
Companies extracting cobalt, lithium, gold, copper, and rare earth minerals, essential for tech, weapons systems, and “green transitions”, have been implicated in forced evictions, child labour, and the violent suppression of Indigenous communities.
From cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where children work in lethal conditions, to gold mining projects in Latin America guarded by armed security forces, extraction is enforced through fear. Communities that resist face militarised police, private guards, or paramilitary violence.
Land is cleared. Resistance is crushed. Profit flows upward.
Agribusiness And The Weaponisation Of Hunger:
Industrial agribusiness is another pillar of human rights destruction.
Corporations controlling land, seeds, and food systems, often backed by financial institutions and state power, have driven mass displacement, deforestation, and food insecurity. In conflict zones and occupied territories, access to food is routinely weaponised.
In Gaza, Yemen, and parts of Africa, starvation is not a tragedy; it is a tactic. Siege warfare, aid restrictions, and the destruction of farmland are enabled by international indifference and corporate profiteering from instability.
When food systems are controlled by monopolies, hunger becomes policy.
Private Military Contractors: War Without Accountability.
Perhaps the clearest symbol of this new order is the rise of private military contractors.
Groups such as Blackwater (now Academi) and other mercenary firms have operated in war zones with near-total impunity, accused of killing civilians, intimidating local populations, and operating outside meaningful legal oversight.
These forces exist precisely to bypass accountability. They allow states and corporations to outsource violence while denying responsibility. Land can be secured, protests crushed, and communities displaced, without the political cost of deploying national armies.
This is a privatised war. And civilians are its expendable raw material.
Bureaucrats, Corruption, And The Sanitisation Of Violence:
None of these functions can operate without bureaucratic complicity.
Permits are signed. Regulations are waived. Courts are undermined. Human rights protections are diluted or abandoned, often in the name of “economic growth” or “national interest.” Politicians move seamlessly between government offices and corporate boardrooms, ensuring continuity of power regardless of elections.
Violence is laundered through paperwork.
The displaced, the murdered, and the imprisoned are reduced to statistics or erased.
The Moral Collapse Of The West:
Western states continue to invoke democracy and human rights while enabling their destruction. They condemn abuses selectively, enforce international law politically, and criminalise dissent at home while exporting violence abroad.
Minorities, migrants, and activists who expose this system are surveilled, repressed, and silenced. Protest is criminalised. Journalism is punished. Truth becomes subversive.
This is not hypocrisy. It is a strategy.
This Is A Line In The Sand:
Human rights are not eroding; they are being liquidated.
- By arms dealers who profit from death.
- By fossil fuel giants who poison the land and displace communities.
- By mining corporations that treat Indigenous lives as obstacles.
- By agribusiness that turns hunger into leverage.
- By private armies that enforce elite control through terror.
- By bureaucrats who sign away accountability.
This system will not reform itself.
If human rights are to survive, they must be defended against corporate rule, against militarised capitalism, and against the permanent war economy that now defines global power.
Silence is no longer neutrality.
It is participation.






