 Seventy years on, we must take stock on the gravity of recent acts, perpetrated against the Rohingyas and Yazidis, and we must do everything possible to hold those responsible to account. Accountability matters, not only because it provides justice for victims and punishment for perpetrators, it matters because ending impunity is central to ending genocide. One of our remaining challenges, seven years after the Convention's adoption, is therefore to improve how we recognize and act on these warning signs, including hate speech, both in the real world and on the social media. Many years have passed since the events that led the international community to say, never again, and draft the Convention. But never again has become time and again. You may ask then if the Convention still has relevance, undoubtedly it has. It has more than ever. The painfully clear lesson, we will never succeed in preventing genocide and other atrocities unless we can address the underlying issues, end the cycle of violence, and replace vengeance with justice. Impunity is an enabler of genocide, accountability is its nemesis.