2004/12/10
Imagine...how to turn the Human Rights Day into a celebration
Social Watch
On December 10th 1948, the General Assembly of the United Nations approved the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which were thus turned into the contemporary universal consensus on individual, collective and inalienable rights of all human beings.
This Declaration, which was adopted by all United Nations
Member States has been supplemented by different conventions, such as those
related to civil and political as well as to economic, social and cultural
rights, women’s and children’s rights and the rights of the most vulnerable
groups.
Fifty-six years after the adoption of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, as armed conflicts represent foreground issues,
displacements and violence against women are on the rise, access to essential
services and medicines is being persistently reduced, and education budgets are
being waned on an yearly basis, it becomes difficult to imagine a world where
everybody would have their human rights fulfilled, protected and respected. It
is difficult to imagine how to turn the Human Rights Day into a celebration.
Governments all over the world committed themselves to
respecting, protecting and fulfilling human rights by the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights. And at the present time, there is reference to a fourth
commitment which is to inform. The right to information is one of the key issues
regarding the fulfilment of human rights.
In spite of this, what seems to be the priority for our
governments at the present time? In the name of individual rights and security,
governments all over the world have committed themselves to bring an end to
terrorism, but at what cost and impact?
Terrorism in any of its forms is highly condemnable, as it
was thus affirmed by the Special Rapporteurs of the UN Human Rights Commission
in their joint statement issued in June 2004. At the same time, they reaffirmed
their individual and collective determination to monitor, each within the
framework of his or her mandate, those policies, legislation, measures and
practices developed by States in the name of the fight against terrorism, with a
view to ascertaining that they are consistent with international human rights
standards.
But at a more global level, there are no human rights as
long as there is poverty… The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
has acknowledged that “in the recent past, poverty was often defined as
insufficient income to buy a minimum basket of goods and services". However,
"poverty may be defined as a human condition characterized
by sustained or chronic deprivation of the resources, capabilities, choices,
security and power necessary for the enjoyment of an adequate standard of living
and other civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights".
And poverty continues to attack the most vulnerable groups
and those who are most vulnerable within these groups, that is to say, women:
women heads of households, or women displaced by conflicts, or indigenous women,
or women that suffer from violence, or women who are discriminated because of
their race, or what is worst, women who suffer from all of the above…
At the end of this year 2004, let us once again imagine a
better world for all women and men with justice and human rights; not just
another world is possible but only another world is possible!
Universal Declaration of Human Rights in over 300 languages
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Women's lives and
bodies -- unrecognized casualties of war
Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Message of Louise Arbour, High Commissioner for Human Rights on the occasion of
International Human Rights Day.
HUMAN
RIGHTS PROTECTION IS A MUST, UN INDEPENDENT EXPERTS AFFIRM ON HUMAN RIGHTS DAY
Joint statement by the rapporteurs
IPS
HUMAN RIGHTS: A SAD ANNIVERSARY
By Mario Soares, president of Portugal from 1986 to 1996.
UNDP
Strengthening UN Support for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights
Worldwide
Statement by Mark Malloch Brown
Human Rights Education Associates (HREA)
Declaration for the Human Rights
Day (10 December 2004)
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