Loading...
Are human rights empty promises?
swissinfo
Pro Tibet demonstration, Geneva, 25.3.08. Photo Michel Bührer
21 April 08 - Human rights are empty promises if states and international organisations do not have the will to implement them, says Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey

swissinfo - Calmy-Rey was speaking at the annual meeting of the Swiss section of Amnesty International on Saturday, marking the 60th anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Sanctions must be imposed on human rights violators "without ceding to economic considerations or those of political opportunism", the foreign minister said, without being more specific.

Calmy-Rey added that the Universal Declaration adopted in 1948 had far-reaching consequences including the redefinition of sovereignty.

She said no state today regardless how influential it was could solve all of its problems without working together with businesses, universities and civil society.

"We have different tasks but common goals," she told Amnesty Switzerland at the meeting in Bern.

"If a state and its institutions are unable to protect their people, then it is the responsibility of the international community to do so, according to the principle adopted last year by the United Nations," she said.

Since the adoption of the Declaration, "no government can claim that the way it treats individuals, religious minorities, ethnic or linguistic groups living on its soil is an internal matter only".

Amnesty Switzerland’s secretary-general, Irene Khan, said abuses were still widespread, naming the imprisonment of Buddhist monks in Myanmar, the numerous judges arrested in Pakistan, and the withholding of basic rights from women in many countries.

Geneva institutions

Switzerland has ratified all of the main agreements on the protection of human rights.

Under the United Nations umbrella, the bodies responsible for the protection and development of human rights are the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the new Human Rights Council, both of which are based in Geneva.

However, official Swiss policy towards the protection of human rights has been criticised by non-governmental organisations.

In a report addressed to the UN in February, a coalition of 30 Swiss NGOs said there was a lack of institutional mechanisms in Switzerland to ensure the effective implementation of human rights conventions.

The coalition also accused Switzerland of dragging its feet in setting up a UN national action plan on the human rights conventions.

The foreign ministry responded by saying it was looking into the necessity and benefits of the idea as well as possible models.

In May, the Human Rights Council is due to examine the government’s report on conditions in Switzerland.

 

Comment

Forum registration required

Prior to reacting to this article, you must register. Thank you for entering the personal identifier supplied to you. If you are not already registered, you must register.

Personal identifiers


[register] [password forgotten?]

 
More articles about same themes ? Use advanced search
--------

Rights watchdog criticises Geneva police 14.11

Is Hartmann’s trial necessary? 11.11

UK: Human Rights Act is a law for ne’er-do-wells 10.11

Montenegro: “Human rights standards improved. Implementation must follow” 15.10

Digging up past atrocities in Spain 10.10

--------

How Child Friendly Is Africa 21.11

Rights watchdog criticises Geneva police 14.11

2,000 Women’s rights activists gather in Cape Town for world’s largerst triennal forum on women in development 12.11

Web Watcher: Universal Declaration of Human Rights 60th anniversary 12.11

In Uruguay, Congress votes to legalise abortion, but veto likely 12.11

--------

Blackwater Busted? 17.11

Rights lawyers file Spanish court case on El Salvador killings 14.11

Web Watcher: Universal Declaration of Human Rights 60th anniversary 12.11

Rights bodies urge help be given to 50 Guantanamo detainees 11.11

African Commission probes Nigeria’s human rights records 10.11

--------

Zimbabwean Women Have Had ‘‘More Trauma’’ After Independence 17.11

The Omar Khadr case: Redefining war crimes 10.11

-------- --------

Congo: Human rights groups request special session of Human Rights Council 17.11

2,000 Women’s rights activists gather in Cape Town for world’s largerst triennal forum on women in development 12.11

Charters  |  About us  |  www.humanrights-geneva.info  |  Editorial teams  |  Web Editor: Michel Bührer
designed by vocables.com with Spip
sommaire prix nicolas bouvier le temps geopolitis tsr.ch swissinfo rue 89 ipsnews infosud