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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Proceso 547: Human Rights
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.060249.29034@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 06:02:49 GMT
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- /** reg.elsalvador: 134.0 **/
- ** Topic: Proceso 547: Human Rights **
- ** Written 1:21 pm Jan 25, 1993 by cidai@huracan.cr in cdp:reg.elsalvador **
- From: cidai@huracan.cr (Centro de Informacion Documentacion y Apoyo a la Invest. - UCAJSC)
- Subject: Proceso 547: Human Rights
-
- Center for Information, Documentation and Research Support (CIDAI)
- Central American University (UCA)
- San Salvador, El Salvador
-
- PROCESO 547
- January 20, 1993
-
- IDHUCA REPORT:
- How much poverty can the wings of freedom bear? (Part I)
-
- Once again, from January 18-22, the capital of Costa Rica
- hosted an important human rights event: the Regional Meeting for
- Latin America and the Caribbean, in preparation for the World
- Conference on Human Rights in June, 1993. In the message read
- during the inauguration of the regional forum, the Executive
- Secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the
- Caribbean (CEPAL), Gert Rosenthal, expressed hope that our
- countries "can make a creative contribution to the debate which
- will take place in Vienna during the World Conference on Human
- Rights."
- The origins of this world summit go back to 1990. On December
- 18 of that year, the U.N. General Assembly issued resolution
- 45/155, convoking the event for 1993, 25 years after the first
- meeting of its kind in Teheran. The objectives of this second World
- Conference are:
- a) To study and evaluate human rights programs implemented since
- the passing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and to
- identify the obstacles to new progress in that area and how they
- can be overcome;
- b) To study the relationship between development and the universal
- enjoyment of economic, social, cultural, civil and political
- rights, recognizing the importance of creating conditions under
- which all can enjoy those rights, enumerated in the International
- Human Rights Pacts;
- c) To study procedures useful in improving the application of the
- existing human rights norms and instruments;
- d) To evaluate the effectiveness of the methods and mechanisms used
- by the United Nations in the area of human rights;
- e) To make concrete recommendations for improving the effectiveness
- of the activities and mechanisms of the United Nations in the area
- of human rights, by means of programs aimed at promoting,
- stimulating and overseeing respect for human rights and fundamental
- freedoms; and
- f) To make recommendations for ways to ensure that the necessary
- financial and other resources are available for the activities of
- the United Nations in the promotion and protection of fundamental
- human rights and freedoms.
- These ambitious goals have required a superhuman effort of
- preparation, which included the regional preparatory meeting held
- in San Jose, similar to the one held in Tunis in November 1992,
- covering Africa, and the one to be held in Bangkok next March, for
- Asia. Due to the structure of the United Nations, both the regional
- preparatory meetings and the world summit will be attended by
- representatives of governments. Thus, in the recent Latin American
- and Caribbean event, the Salvadoran delegation was headed by the
- director of the official Human Rights Commission, Benjamin Cestoni.
- However, that did not exclude the participation -as observers- of
- the director of ONUSAL's human rights division, Dr. Garcia-Sayan,
- along with one delegate each from nine Salvadoran non-governmental
- organizations.
- The initial agenda proposed to the plenary contained several
- outstanding points. In the first place, the need to identify
- existing obstacles to the full enjoyment of human rights, along
- with (in accordance with the purposes and principles of the U.N.
- Charter) contemporary tendencies and new challenges for the full
- enjoyment of all human rights, particularly by the most vulnerable
- sectors. But principally, we will address the point on the
- relationship between development, democracy and the universal
- enjoyment of all human rights, taking into account the
- interdependence and indivisibility of economic, social, cultural,
- civil and political rights.
- This last point held much of the attention of the participants
- in the regional meeting. At the very start, during the
- inauguration, we heard the words of CEPAL: "How do we reconcile the
- tangible gains seen in the area of civil and political rights with
- the backsliding seen in economic and social rights?" Rosenthal
- added, "this is one of the questions which, from the point of view
- of our region, requires a response. We must admit that preventing
- the violation of the civil or political rights of individuals and
- communities is not the same as ensuring that all persons and their
- families are afforded the right to an adequate standard of living,
- which includes adequate food, clothing and housing, and continuing
- improvement in their standards of living. The first is more of an
- ethical, cultural, political and institutional issue for society;
- the second also has to do with how resources are allocated.
- Although political and civil rights and economic and social rights
- can be covered by different legal statutes in terms of their
- character, demandability and means of protection, both aspects are
- part of an integral vision of development as well as an integral
- vision of the fundamental rights of individuals."
- In the view of the Executive Secretary of CEPAL, "if we do not
- fully realize economic and social rights, the hard-won civil and
- political rights will tend to become a dead letter for sectors with
- fewer resources and lower levels of education and information. By
- now it has been amply shown that those sectors have much more
- restricted access to justice and to the possibility of defending
- themselves from attack by others or by the State. Poverty and the
- lack of exercise of citizens' rights often go together. It is a
- fundamental requirement to change this situation in order to
- stabilize the region's democracies and achieve truly universal
- citizenship."
- According to Antoine Blanca, U.N. Assistant Secretary General
- for Human Rights and Secretary General of the World Conference on
- Human Rights, the great challenges at the end of the century can be
- found in "the protection of vulnerable groups, support and
- strengthening of democracy, economic and social development,
- humanitarian assistance, the preservation of the environment and
- peaceful conflict resolution." The close ties of these issues to
- human rights shows how indivisible they all are, both in individual
- and collective terms, both civil and political as well as economic,
- social and cultural. And facing these challenges requires an
- enormous dose of concrete solidarity.
- "Latin America and the Caribbean," said Blanca, "have had an
- experience over the last decade that could be termed paradoxical:
- the return of democracy to many lands which lived under military
- dictatorships and which have suffered the most serious economic
- crisis in history, made worse by the weight of foreign debt." We
- must recognize that the structural adjustment policies have had a
- social cost which has harmed the least privileged and most
- vulnerable sectors of society. Extreme poverty, the reduction of
- primary health care availability, the deterioration of basic
- education, the unacceptable situation of street urchins, are all
- problems which must be foreseen as part of an integrated vision.
- Democracy must go hand in hand with lasting economic and social
- development, both nationally and internationally. Otherwise, in the
- magnificent words of the former president of the U.N. General
- Assembly, Dante Caputo: "How much poverty can the wings of freedom
- bear?"
-
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.elsalvador **
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