Human Rights Day
Message of Bertrand Ramcharan, Acting United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights
10 December 2003
We must all be
deeply distressed and anguished on this Human Rights Day that, 10
years after the solemn commitments of the Vienna World Conference on
Human Rights (1993), human rights are grossly violated throughout
the world because of poverty, conflicts, terrorism, violence,
prejudice and bad governance.
Notwithstanding the lofty commitments in the Vienna Declaration and
Programme of Action, and the more recent commitment to human rights
values in the Millennium Declaration (2000), the universality of
human rights remains formal rather than real in the contemporary
world. Inequalities and injustices against women and children are
commonplace, and racism and racial discrimination have far from
receded.
Poverty has not declined. On the contrary, for nearly a billion
people the economic, social and cultural rights of the Universal
Declaration, whose fifty-fifth anniversary we commemorate this year,
will remain illusory. They will hardly be able to survive and many
will not live to the age of fifty-five. Democracy, the rule of law,
and respect for civil and political rights are distant from the
wretched poor of the earth. The struggle against poverty must remain
at the forefront of the human rights movement.
In today’s world civilians are deliberately targeted in conflicts
and the rules of international human rights and humanitarian laws
are flouted with impunity. Contemporary conflicts wreak havoc on the
human rights of millions. It is therefore of the utmost urgency to
intensify efforts for the prevention of conflicts – nationally,
regionally and internationally. The prevention of conflicts means
the prevention of gross violations of human rights.
Terrorism, alas, adds to the burdens of the world’s peoples. The
Security Council, the General Assembly and the Commission on Human
Rights have all soundly condemned terrorism. Terrorists kill, maim,
terrify and threaten without compunction. The international human
rights movement must speak out against terrorism with all the force
at its command.
Violence, deliberately perpetrated by authorities on their subjects,
afflicts millions of the world’s people. Torture, arbitrary and
summary executions, enforced and involuntary disappearances,
arbitrary detention, and the ill-treatment of minorities, indigenous
populations and migrants are widespread. Thousands of young women
are trafficked into prostitution and slavery. The sexual
exploitation of children is a blight on our civilization. We
continue to experience a crisis of values among humankind. The
international human rights movement must denounce gross violations
of human rights wherever they occur. It is a duty of conscience.
Prejudice, racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, anti-Semitism,
anti-Islamism, anti-other religions, and other forms of intolerance
are prevalent in our midst – often in the heart of societies that
profess faith in the ideals of the Charter of the United Nations and
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Governments profess
tolerance while their people hate those of a different complexion or
culture. The struggle for equality and non-discrimination must be a
rallying struggle of the human rights movement.
Let us be honest and recognize that bad governance is at the root of
many of the afflictions of the world’s peoples and of the gross
violations of human rights that are rampant in the contemporary
world. Equity and the stronger protection of human rights demand
better governance. In the words of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, the will of the people must be the basis of the
authority of government. This will should be expressed in periodic
and genuine elections by universal and equal suffrage in free voting
procedures.
On this Human Rights Day, my heart goes out to the victims of human
rights violations the world over. I plead for the cessation of these
pervasive violations of human rights. I plead for the world of the
Universal Declaration to become reality for all the world’s peoples
on the ground. I plead for democracy, for the rule of law, and for
justice.
I plead for stronger measures of protection, nationally, regionally
and internationally. I call upon each Government to review the
adequacy of its protection mechanisms at home. I call upon
subregional and regional organizations to ask what more they could
do to strengthen human rights protection. I call upon the Security
Council, the General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council, the
Commission on Human Rights and the human rights treaty bodies, each
to consider what more it could do to strengthen human rights
protection.
We have not yet attained the world of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights. But I am convinced that one day we shall. The promise
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights beckons us to a better
world. Today, I plead for stronger human rights protection.
Source: http://www.un.org |