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UN official calls Ebola and Islamic State fighters ‘twin plagues’

WATCH: The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Thursday that Ebola has the potential to “devastate the the human rights” of those who survive it.

GENEVA – U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein drew comparisons between the Ebola outbreak and the Islamic State group Thursday, labeling them “twin plagues” upon the world that were allowed to gain strength because of widespread neglect and misunderstanding.

At his first news conference since becoming the U.N.’s top human rights official last month, Zeid focused on the “two monumental crises” that he said would inevitably cost nations many billions to overcome.

“The twin plagues of Ebola and ISIL,” he told reporters, using an acronym for the group, “both fomented quietly, neglected by a world that knew they existed but misread their terrible potential before exploding into the global consciousness during the latter months of 2014.”

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READ MORE: U.S. steps up its domestic response to Ebola crisis

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Zeid said the U.N. human rights office has begun drawing up guidelines for Ebola-hit nations to follow if they impose health quarantines on people, because such efforts can easily violate a wide range of human rights if imposed and enforced unjustly.

Along the border of Iraq and Syria, the Islamic fighters who are seizing ground represent “a diabolical, potentially genocidal movement” that is the product of “a perverse and lethal marriage of a new form of nihilism with the digital age,” he said.

READ MORE: Live blog: Canadian experts answer your questions about Ebola

WATCH: One of the world’s most famous humanitarian campaigners, Sir Bob Geldof, said that people in West Africa weren’t dying of the Ebola virus but because they’re poor.

The veteran diplomat and prince from Jordan also urged Iraq to join The Hague-based International Criminal Court and to take the “immediate step” of accepting its jurisdiction to allow for the prosecution of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity that a U.N. Human Rights Council-appointed mission is investigating.

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Syria has signed the treaty establishing the ICC, but has not ratified it.

READ MORE: Islamic State: What is known about the ISIS chemical weapons claims

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