EU celebrates UN declaration of human rights with tribute to dissidents.

Published: 8 October 2008 y., Wednesday

Rašymas
Tunisian journalist Souhayr Belhassen has campaigned in defence of human rights for more than three decades. Over the years she has been repeatedly attacked by plainclothes police officers. Her phones have been tapped, her mail intercepted, her weekly magazine shut down. At one point she was even banished from her country.

Horrible as it sounds, her story isn’t unusual. Dissidents around the world often go to great risk to expose rights abuses. In many cases, they pay with their lives.

To mark the 60th anniversary of the universal declaration of human rights, the EU is paying tribute to human rights defenders around the world. Belhassen, now president of the International Federation of Human Rights Leagues, is among 27 prominent rights activists invited to a conference on 7-8 October at the European parliament. Most Europeans have heard of the universal declaration, but they may not know that 2008 is also the anniversary of another milestone in human rights: the UN declaration on human rights defenders, adopted in 1998. This document recognises the importance and legitimacy of the work of rights activists, as well as their need for better protection. The EU followed suit in 2004, issuing a set of guidelines that encourages EU countries to do more to support activists at risk.

The world was still reeling from the horrors of World War II when the universal declaration of human rights was signed on 10 December 1948. It was the first time in history that nations came together to agree on basic principles of justice, equality, and rights for all.

Immediately hailed as a triumph, the declaration united very diverse and even conflicting political regimes, religious systems and cultural traditions. Six decades later, it has become the foundation of international human rights law, serving as a model for numerous treaties and declarations, including the European convention on human rights (1950) and the EU charter of fundamental rights (2000). And despite continued attacks on the universality of human rights, all countries have accepted the declaration, and some have incorporated it into their constitutions and laws.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Cardboard city slum

The international medical aid agency Medicine Sans Frontieres say the migrants - who are being employed in Southern Italy, are being exploited by living in very poor conditions and being paid meagre wages. more »

Prisoners get creative

Inmates at the Philippine national prison never imagined they would serve sentences by making dresses. more »

How to get young people into politics and to the ballot box

In Albert Einstien's view "common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age 18". more »

Row over body parts show

Prosecutors in Poland are examining whether the exhibition entitled 'Bodies' is illegal. more »

Better safe than sorry – new EU strategy on disaster prevention

New proposal to strengthen disaster prevention capacities and increase cooperation with developing countries. more »

Israel apologises for Jesus spoof

Private broadcaster Channel 10 aired "The Tonight Show" with Lior Shlein last week, with a skit depicting the Virgin Mary as a pregnant teenager and Jesus as being too fat to walk on water. more »

Awards for green urban living

Stockholm and Hamburg named first ‘green capitals’. Budapest wins European mobility week award. more »

Australia mourns bushfire victims

Bells ringing out to mark the start of the ceremony in Melbourne - capital of the disaster-hit state of Victoria. more »

Germany celebrates carnival

Carnival's celebrated in Germany's mainly Catholic regions - the south and the west. more »

Do you know what social Europe can do for you?

Circus campaign will raise awareness of EU social policies in 2009. more »