I think the best thing to do is to work for reform of the international institutions. In a recent interview with A Contrario, I mentioned that the Rome Statute itself needs to be reformed. Under article 13(b) cases should be taken from the Security Council referral and taken to the Human Rights Council, for instance, because these people don't care for human rights. They care only for interests. Anyone simply says “veto”, and it's finished.
We now have had three years of bloodshed in Syria and more than 200,000 killed. We have six million refugees with two million outside the country and four million or a little bit more inside Syria, and at the same time also thousands and thousands of women who were sexually assaulted in a very bad way, and men as well. The international community has done nothing to stop it.
Really, I feel ashamed that the international community was able to make a deal with the regime concerning chemical weapons but not to stop the war, not to open and give food to the besieged villages and towns in Syria. Thousands of women and children are suffering from hunger. There is lots of suffering there, and the international community is turning a blind eye or they're not interested.
One thing comes to mind that was mentioned in Senator Dallaire's book Shake Hands With The Devil. He was asking an American officer why he did not do something to stop the war in Rwanda. He said, “We don't even have a dog in that fight.”