Vienna 1993
WORLD CONFERENCE ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Vienna, 14-25 June 1993
VIENNA DECLARATION AND PROGRAMME OF ACTION
Note by the secretariat
Attached is the text of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action,
as adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights on 25 June 1993.
VIENNA DECLARATION AND PROGRAMME OF ACTION
The World Conference on Human Rights,
Considering that the promotion and protection of human rights
is a matter of priority for the international community, and that the Conference
affords a unique opportunity to carry out a comprehensive analysis of the
international human rights system and of the machinery for the protection
of human rights, in order to enhance and thus promote a fuller observance
of those rights, in a just and balanced manner,
Recognizing and affirming that all human rights derive from the
dignity and worth inherent in the human person, and that the human person
is the central subject of human rights and fundamental freedoms, and consequently
should be the principal beneficiary and should participate actively in
the realization of these rights and freedoms,
Reaffirming their commitment to the purposes and principles contained
in the Charter of the United Nations and the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights,
Reaffirming the commitment contained in Article 56 of the Charter
of the United Nations to take joint and separate action, placing proper
emphasis on developing effective international cooperation for the realization
of the purposes set out in Article 55, including universal respect for,
and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all,
Emphasizing the responsibilities of all States, in conformity
with the Charter of the United Nations, to develop and encourage respect
for human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, without distinction
as to race, sex, language or religion,
Recalling the Preamble to the Charter of the United Nations,
in particular the determination to reaffirm faith in fundamental human
rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, and in the equal
rights of men and women and of nations large and small,
Recalling also the determination expressed in the Preamble of
the Charter of the United Nations to save succeeding generations from the
scourge of war, to establish conditions under which justice and respect
for obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international
law can be maintained, to promote social progress and better standards
of life in larger freedom, to practice tolerance and good neighbourliness,
and to employ international machinery for the promotion of the economic
and social advancement of all peoples,
Emphasizing that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which
constitutes a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations,
is the source of inspiration and has been the basis for the United Nations
in making advances in standard setting as contained in the existing international
human rights instruments, in particular the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights.
Considering the major changes taking place on the international
scene and the aspirations of all the peoples for an international order
based on the principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations,
including promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms for all and respect for the principle of equal rights and self
-determination of peoples, peace, democracy, justice, equality, rule of
law, pluralism, development, better standards of living and solidarity,
Deeply concerned by various forms of discrimination and violence,
to which women continue to be exposed all over the world,
Recognizing that the activities of the United Nations in the
field of human rights should be rationalized and enhanced in order to strengthen
the United Nations machinery in this field and to further the objectives
of universal respect for observance of international human rights standards,
Having taken into account the Declarations adopted by the three
regional meetings at Tunis, San Jose and Bangkok and the contributions
made by Governments, and bearing in mind the suggestions made by intergovernmental
and non-governmental organizations, as well as the studies prepared by
independent experts during the preparatory process leading to the World
Conference on Human Rights,
Welcoming the International Year of the World's Indigenous People
1993 as a reaffirmation of the commitment of the international community
to ensure their enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms
and to respect the value and diversity of their cultures and identities,
Recognizing also that the international community should devise
ways and means to remove the current obstacles and meet challenges to the
full realization of all human rights and to prevent the continuation of
human rights violations resulting thereof throughout the world,
Invoking the spirit of our age and the realities of our time
which call upon the peoples of the world and all States Members of the
United Nations to rededicate themselves to the global task of promoting
and protecting all human rights and fundamental freedoms so as to secure
full and universal enjoyment of these rights,
Determined to take new steps forward in the commitment of the
international community with a view to achieving substantial progress in
human rights endeavours by an increased and sustained effort of international
cooperation and solidarity,
Solemnly adopts the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action.
I
1. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the solemn commitment
of all States to fulfil their obligations to promote universal respect
for, and observance and protection of, all human rights and fundamental
freedoms for all in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,
other instruments relating to human rights, and international law. The
universal nature of these rights and freedoms is beyond question.
In this framework, enhancement of international cooperation in the field
of human rights is essential for the full achievement of the purposes of
the United Nations.
Human rights and fundamental freedoms are the birthright of all human
beings; their protection and promotion is the first responsibility of Governments.
2. All peoples have the right of self-determination. By virtue of that
right they freely determine their political status, and freely pursue their
economic, social and cultural development.
Taking into account the particular situation of peoples under colonial
or other forms of alien domination or foreign occupation, the World Conference
on Human Rights recognizes the right of peoples to take any legitimate
action, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, to realize
their inalienable right of self-determination. The World Conference on
Human Rights considers the denial of the right of self-determination as
a violation of human rights and underlines the importance of the effective
realization of this right.
In accordance with the Declaration on Principles of International Law
concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation Among States in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations, this shall not be construed as
authorizing or encouraging any action which would dismember or impair,
totally or in part, the territorial integrity or political unity of sovereign
and independent States conducting themselves in compliance with the principle
of equal rights and self-determination of peoples and thus possessed of
a Government representing the whole people belonging to the territory without
distinction of any kind.
3. Effective international measures to guarantee and monitor the implementation
of human rights standards should be taken in respect of people under foreign
occupation, and effective legal protection against the violation of their
human rights should be provided, in accordance with human rights norms
and international law, particularly the Geneva Convention relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 14 August 1949, and other
applicable norms of humanitarian law.
4. The promotion and protection of all human rights and fundamental
freedoms must be considered as a priority objective of the United Nations
in accordance with its purposes and principles, in particular the purpose
of international cooperation. In the framework of these purposes and principles,
the promotion and protection of all human rights is a legitimate concern
of the international community. The organs and specialized agencies related
to human rights should therefore further enhance the coordination of their
activities based on the consistent and objective application of international
human rights instruments.
5. All human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent and
interrelated. The international community must treat human rights globally
in a fair and equal manner, on the same footing, and with the same emphasis.
While the significance of national and regional particularities and various
historical, cultural and religious backgrounds must be borne in mind, it
is the duty of States, regardless of their political, economic and cultural
systems, to promote and protect all human rights and fundamental freedoms.
6. The efforts of the United Nations system towards the universal respect
for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all,
contribute to the stability and well-being necessary for peaceful and friendly
relations among nations, and to improved conditions for peace and security
as well as social and economic development, in conformity with the Charter
of the United Nations.
7. The processes of promoting and protecting human rights should be
conducted in conformity with the purposes and principles of the Charter
of the United Nations, and international law.
8. Democracy, development and respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms are interdependent and mutually reinforcing. Democracy is based
on the freely expressed will of the people to determine their own political,
economic, social and cultural systems and their full participation in all
aspects of their lives. In the context of the above, the promotion and
protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and
international levels should be universal and conducted without conditions
attached. The international community should support the strengthening
and promoting of democracy, development and respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms in the entire world.
9. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms that least developed
countries committed to the process of democratization and economic reforms,
many of which are in Africa, should be supported by the international community
in order to succeed in their transition to democracy and economic development.
10. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the right to development,
as established in the Declaration on the Right to Development, as a universal
and inalienable right and an integral part of fundamental human rights.
As stated in the Declaration on the Right to Development, the human
person is the central subject of development.
While development facilitates the enjoyment of all human rights, the
lack of development may not be invoked to justify the abridgement of internationally
recognized human rights.
States should cooperate with each other in ensuring development and
eliminating obstacles to development. The international community should
promote an effective international cooperation for the realization of the
right to development and the elimination of obstacles to development.
Lasting progress towards the implementation of the right to development
requires effective development policies at the national level, as well
as equitable economic relations and a favourable economic environment at
the international level.
11. The right to development should be fulfilled so as to meet equitably
the developmental and environmental needs of present and future generations.
The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes that illicit dumping of
toxic and dangerous substances and waste potentially constitutes a serious
threat to the human rights to life and health of everyone.
Consequently, the World Conference on Human Rights calls on all States
to adopt and vigorously implement existing conventions relating to the
dumping of toxic and dangerous products and waste and to cooperate in the
prevention of illicit dumping.
Everyone has the right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress
and its applications. The World Conference on Human Rights notes that certain
advances, notably in the biomedical and life sciences as well as in information
technology, may have potentially adverse consequences for the integrity,
dignity and human rights of the individual, and calls for international
cooperation to ensure that human rights and dignity are fully respected
in this area of universal concern
12. The World Conference on Human Rights calls upon the international
community to make all efforts to help alleviate the external debt burden
of developing countries, in order to supplement the efforts of the Governments
of such countries to attain the full realization of the economic, social
and cultural rights of their people.
13. There is a need for States and international organizations, in cooperation
with non-governmental organizations, to create favourable conditions at
the national, regional and international levels to ensure the full and
effective enjoyment of human rights. States should eliminate all violations
of human rights and their causes, as well as obstacles to the enjoyment
of these rights.
14. The existence of widespread extreme poverty inhibits the full and
effective enjoyment of human rights; its immediate alleviation and eventual
elimination must remain a high priority for the international community.
15. Respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms without distinction
of any kind is a fundamental rule of international human rights law. The
speedy and comprehensive elimination of all forms of racism and racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance is a priority task for
the international community. Governments should take effective measures
to prevent and combat them. Groups, institutions, intergovernmental and
nongovernmental organizations and individuals are urged to intensify their
efforts in cooperating and coordinating their activities against these
evils.
16. The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the progress made
in dismantling apartheid and calls upon the international community and
the United Nations system to assist in this process.
The World Conference on Human Rights also deplores the continuing acts
of violence aimed at undermining the quest for a peaceful dismantling of
apartheid.
17. The acts, methods and practices of terrorism in all its forms and
manifestations as well as linkage in some countries to drug trafficking
are activities aimed at the destruction of human rights, fundamental freedoms
and democracy, threatening territorial integrity, security of States and
destabilizing legitimately constituted Governments. The international community
should take the necessary steps to enhance cooperation to prevent and combat
terrorism.
18. The human rights of women and of the girl-child are an inalienable,
integral and indivisible part of universal human rights. The full and equal
participation of women in political, civil, economic, social and cultural
life, at the national, regional and international levels, and the eradication
of all forms of discrimination on grounds of sex are priority objectives
of the international community.
Gender-based violence and all forms of sexual harassment and exploitation,
including those resulting from cultural prejudice and international trafficking,
are incompatible with the dignity and worth of the human person, and must
be eliminated. This can be achieved by legal measures and through national
action and international cooperation in such fields as economic and social
development, education, safe maternity and health care, and social support.
The human rights of women should form an integral part of the United
Nations human rights activities, including the promotion of all human rights
instruments relating to women.
The World Conference on Human Rights urges Governments, institutions,
intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations to intensify their
efforts for the protection and promotion of human rights of women and the
girl-child.
19. Considering the importance of the promotion and protection of the
rights of persons belonging to minorities and the contribution of such
promotion and protection to the political and social stability of the States
in which such persons live,
The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the obligation of States
to ensure that persons belonging to minorities may exercise fully and effectively
all human rights and fundamental freedoms without any discrimination and
in full equality before the law in accordance with the Declaration on the
Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic
Minorities.
The persons belonging to minorities have the right to enjoy their own
culture, to profess and practise their own religion and to use their own
language in private and in public, freely and without interference or any
form of discrimination.
20. The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes the inherent dignity
and the unique contribution of indigenous people to the development and
plurality of society and strongly reaffirms the commitment of the international
community to their economic, social and cultural well-being and their enjoyment
of the fruits of sustainable development. States should ensure the full
and free participation of indigenous people in all aspects of society,
in particular in matters of concern to them. Considering the importance
of the promotion and protection of the rights of indigenous people, and
the contribution of such promotion and protection to the political and
social stability of the States in which such people live, States should,
in accordance with international law, take concerted positive steps to
ensure respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous
people, on the basis of equality and non-discrimination, and recognize
the value and diversity of their distinct identities, cultures and social
organization.
21. The World Conference on Human Rights, welcoming the early ratification
of the Convention on the Rights of the Child by a large number of States
and noting the recognition of the human rights of children in the World
Declaration on the Survival, Protection and Development of Children and
Plan of Action adopted by the World Summit for Children, urges universal
ratification of the Convention by 1995 and its effective implementation
by States parties through the adoption of all the necessary legislative,
administrative and other measures and the allocation to the maximum extent
of the available resources. In all actions concerning children, nondiscrimination
and the best interest of the child should be primary considerations and
the views of the child given due weight. National and international mechanisms
and programmes should be strengthened for the defence and protection of
children, in particular, the girlchild, abandoned children, street children,
economically and sexually exploited children, including through child pornography,
child prostitution or sale of organs, children victims of diseases including
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, refugee and displaced children, children
in detention, children in armed conflict, as well as children victims of
famine and drought and other emergencies. International cooperation and
solidarity should be promoted to support the implementation of the Convention
and the rights of the child should be a priority in the United Nations
system-wide action on human rights.
The World Conference on Human Rights also stresses that the child for
the full and harmonious development of his or her personality should grow
up in a family environment which accordingly merits broader protection.
22. Special attention needs to be paid to ensuring non-discrimination,
and the equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by
disabled persons, including their active participation in all aspects of
society.
23. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms that everyone, without
distinction of any kind, is entitled to the right to seek and to enjoy
in other countries asylum from persecution, as well as the right to return
to one's own country. In this respect it stresses the importance of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the 1951 Convention relating to
the Status of Refugees, its 1967 Protocol and regional instruments. It
expresses its appreciation to States that continue to admit and host large
numbers of refugees in their territories, and to the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees for its dedication to its task.
It also expresses its appreciation to the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.
The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes that gross violations
of human rights, including in armed conflicts, are among the multiple and
complex factors leading to displacement of people.
The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes that, in view of the
complexities of the global refugee crisis and in accordance with the Charter
of the United Nations, relevant international instruments and international
solidarity and in the spirit of burden-sharing, a comprehensive approach
by the international community is needed in coordination and cooperation
with the countries concerned and relevant organizations, bearing in mind
the mandate of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. This
should include the development of strategies to address the root causes
and effects of movements of refugees and other displaced persons, the strengthening
of emergency preparedness and response mechanisms, the provision of effective
protection and assistance, bearing in mind the special needs of women and
children, as well as the achievement of durable solutions, primarily through
the preferred solution of dignified and safe voluntary repatriation, including
solutions such as those adopted by the international refugee conferences.
The World Conference on Human Rights underlines the responsibilities of
States, particularly as they relate to the countries of origin.
In the light of the comprehensive approach, the World Conference on
Human Rights emphasizes the importance of giving special attention including
through intergovernmental and humanitarian organizations and finding lasting
solutions to questions related to internally displaced persons including
their voluntary and safe return and rehabilitation.
In accordance with the Charter of the United Nations and the principles
of humanitarian law, the World Conference on Human Rights further emphasizes
the importance of and the need for humanitarian assistance to victims of
all natural and man-made disasters.
24. Great importance must be given to the promotion and protection of
the human rights of persons belonging to groups which have been rendered
vulnerable, including migrant workers, the elimination of all forms of
discrimination against them, and the strengthening and more effective implementation
of existing human rights instruments. States have an obligation to create
and maintain adequate measures at the national level, in particular in
the fields of education, health and social support, for the promotion and
protection of the rights of persons in vulnerable sectors of their populations
and to ensure the participation of those among them who are interested
in finding a solution to their own problems.
25. The World Conference on Human Rights affirms that extreme poverty
and social exclusion constitute a violation of human dignity and that urgent
steps are necessary to achieve better knowledge of extreme poverty and
its causes, including those related to the problem of development, in order
to promote the human rights of the poorest, and to put an end to extreme
poverty and social exclusion and to promote the enjoyment of the fruits
of social progress. It is essential for States to foster participation
by the poorest people in the decision-making process by the community in
which they live, the promotion of human rights and efforts to combat extreme
poverty.
26. The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the progress made
in the codification of human rights instruments, which is a dynamic and
evolving process, and urges the universal ratification of human rights
treaties. All States are encouraged to accede to these international instruments;
all States are encouraged to avoid, as far as possible, the resort to reservations.
27. Every State should provide an effective framework of remedies to
redress human rights grievances or violations. The administration of justice,
including law enforcement and prosecutorial agencies and, especially, an
independent judiciary and legal profession in full conformity with applicable
standards contained in international human rights instruments, are essential
to the full and non-discriminatory realization of human rights and indispensable
to the processes of democracy and sustainable development. In this context,
institutions concerned with the administration of justice should be properly
funded, and an increased level of both technical and financial assistance
should be provided by the international community. It is incumbent upon
the United Nations to make use of special programmes of advisory services
on a priority basis for the achievement of a strong and independent administration
of justice.
28. The World Conference on Human Rights expresses its dismay at massive
violations of human rights especially in the form of genocide, "ethnic
cleansing" and systematic rape of women in war situations, creating mass
exodus of refugees and displaced persons. While strongly condemning such
abhorrent practices it reiterates the call that perpetrators of such crimes
be punished and such practices immediately stopped.
29. The World Conference on Human Rights expresses grave concern about
continuing human rights violations in all parts of the world in disregard
of standards as contained in international human rights instruments and
international humanitarian law and about the lack of sufficient and effective
remedies for the victims.
The World Conference on Human Rights is deeply concerned about violations
of human rights during armed conflicts, affecting the civilian population,
especially women, children, the elderly and the disabled. The Conference
therefore calls upon States and all parties to armed conflicts strictly
to observe international humanitarian law, as set forth in the Geneva Conventions
of 1949 and other rules and principles of international law, as well as
minimum standards for protection of human rights, as laid down in international
conventions.
The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the right of the victims
to be assisted by humanitarian organizations, as set forth in the Geneva
Conventions of 1949 and other relevant instruments of international humanitarian
law, and calls for the safe and timely access for such assistance.
30. The World Conference on Human Rights also expresses its dismay and
condemnation that gross and systematic violations and situations that constitute
serious obstacles to the full enjoyment of all human rights continue to
occur in different parts of the world. Such violations and obstacles include,
as well as torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment,
summary and arbitrary executions, disappearances, arbitrary detentions,
all forms of racism, racial discrimination and apartheid, foreign occupation
and alien domination, xenophobia, poverty, hunger and other denials of
economic, social and cultural rights, religious intolerance, terrorism,
discrimination against women and lack of the rule of law.
31. The World Conference on Human Rights calls upon States to refrain
from any unilateral measure not in accordance with international law and
the Charter of the United Nations that creates obstacles to trade relations
among States and impedes the full realization of the human rights set forth
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international human rights
instruments, in particular the rights of everyone to a standard of living
adequate for their health and well-being, including food and medical care,
housing and the necessary social services. The World Conference on Human
Rights affirms that food should not be used as a tool for political pressure.
32. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the importance of
ensuring the universality, objectivity and non-selectivity of the consideration
of human rights issues.
33. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms that States are dutybound,
as stipulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and in other international
human rights instruments, to ensure that education is aimed at strengthening
the respect of human rights and fundamental freedoms. The World Conference
on Human Rights emphasizes the importance of incorporating the subject
of human rights education programmes and calls upon States to do so. Education
should promote understanding, tolerance, peace and friendly relations between
the nations and all racial or religious groups and encourage the development
of United Nations activities in pursuance of these objectives. Therefore,
education on human rights and the dissemination of proper information,
both theoretical and practical, play an important role in the promotion
and respect of human rights with regard to all individuals without distinction
of any kind such as race, sex, language or religion, and this should be
integrated in the education policies at the national as well as international
levels. The World Conference on Human Rights notes that resource constraints
and institutional inadequacies may impede the immediate realization of
these objectives.
34. Increased efforts should be made to assist countries which so request
to create the conditions whereby each individual can enjoy universal human
rights and fundamental freedoms. Governments, the United Nations system
as well as other multilateral organizations are urged to increase considerably
the resources allocated to programmes aiming at the establishment and strengthening
of national legislation, national institutions and related infrastructures
which uphold the rule of law and democracy, electoral assistance, human
rights awareness through training, teaching and education, popular participation
and civil society.
The programmes of advisory services
and technical cooperation under the Centre for Human Rights should be strengthened
as well as made more efficient and transparent and thus become a major
contribution to improving respect for human rights. States are called upon
to increase their contributions to these programmes, both through promoting
a larger allocation from the United Nations regular budget, and through
voluntary contributions.
35. The full and effective implementation of United Nations activities
to promote and protect human rights must reflect the high importance accorded
to human rights by the Charter of the United Nations and the demands of
the United Nations human rights activities, as mandated by Member States.
To this end, United Nations human rights activities should be provided
with increased resources.
36. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms the important and
constructive role played by national institutions for the promotion and
protection of human rights, in particular in their advisory capacity to
the competent authorities, their role in remedying human rights violations,
in the dissemination of human rights information, and education in human
rights.
The World Conference on Human Rights encourages the establishment and
strengthening of national institutions, having regard to the "Principles
relating to the status of national institutions" and recognizing that it
is the right of each State to choose the framework which is best suited
to its particular needs at the national level.
37. Regional arrangements play a fundamental role in promoting and protecting
human rights. They should reinforce universal human rights standards, as
contained in international human rights instruments, and their protection.
The World Conference on Human Rights endorses efforts under way to strengthen
these arrangements and to increase their effectiveness, while at the same
time stressing the importance of cooperation with the United Nations human
rights activities.
The World Conference on Human Rights reiterates the need to consider
the possibility of establishing regional and subregional arrangements for
the promotion and protection of human rights where they do not already
exist.
38. The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes the important role
of non-governmental organizations in the promotion of all human rights
and in humanitarian activities at national, regional and international
levels. The World Conference on Human Rights appreciates their contribution
to increasing public awareness of human rights issues, to the conduct of
education, training and research in this field, and to the promotion and
protection of all human rights and fundamental freedoms. While recognizing
that the primary responsibility for standard-setting lies with States,
the conference also appreciates the contribution of non-governmental organizations
to this process. In this respect, the World Conference on Human Rights
emphasizes the importance of continued dialogue and cooperation between
Governments and nongovernmental organizations. Non-governmental organizations
and their members genuinely involved in the field of human rights should
enjoy the rights and freedoms recognized in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, and the protection of the national law. These rights and
freedoms may not be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of
the United Nations. Nongovernmental organizations should be free to carry
out their human rights activities, without interference, within the framework
of national law and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
39. Underlining the importance of objective, responsible and impartial
information about human rights and humanitarian issues, the World Conference
on Human Rights encourages the increased involvement of the media, for
whom freedom and protection should be guaranteed within the framework of
national law.
II
A. Increased coordination on human rights within the United Nations
system
1. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends increased coordination
in support of human rights and fundamental freedoms within the United Nations
system. To this end, the World Conference on Human Rights urges all United
Nations organs, bodies and the specialized agencies whose activities deal
with human rights to cooperate in order to strengthen, rationalize and
streamline their activities, taking into account the need to avoid unnecessary
duplication. The World Conference on Human Rights also recommends to the
Secretary-General that high-level officials of relevant United Nations
bodies and specialized agencies at their annual meeting, besides coordinating
their activities, also assess the impact of their strategies and policies
on the enjoyment of all human rights.
2. Furthermore, the World Conference on Human Rights calls on regional
organizations and prominent international and regional finance and development
institutions to assess also the impact of their policies and programmes
on the enjoyment of human rights.
3. The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes that relevant specialized
agencies and bodies and institutions of the United Nations system as well
as other relevant intergovernmental organizations whose activities deal
with human rights play a vital role in the formulation, promotion and implementation
of human rights standards, within their respective mandates, and should
take into account the outcome of the World Conference on Human Rights within
their fields of competence.
4. The World Conference on Human Rights strongly recommends that a concerted
effort be made to encourage and facilitate the ratification of and accession
or succession to international human rights treaties and protocols adopted
within the framework of the United Nations system with the aim of universal
acceptance. The Secretary-General, in consultation with treaty bodies,
should consider opening a dialogue with States not having acceded to these
human rights treaties, in order to identify obstacles and to seek ways
of overcoming them.
5. The World Conference on Human Rights encourages States to consider
limiting the extent of any reservations they lodge to international human
rights instruments, formulate any reservations as precisely and narrowly
as possible, ensure that none is incompatible with the object and purpose
of the relevant treaty and regularly review any reservations with a view
to withdrawing them.
6. The World Conference on Human Rights, recognizing the need to maintain
consistency with the high quality of existing international standards and
to avoid proliferation of human rights instruments, reaffirms the guidelines
relating to the elaboration of new international instruments contained
in General Assembly resolution 41/120 of 4 December 1986 and calls on the
United Nations human rights bodies, when considering the elaboration of
new international standards, to keep those guidelines in mind, to consult
with human rights treaty bodies on the necessity for drafting new standards
and to request the Secretariat to carry out technical reviews of proposed
new instruments.
7. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that human rights
officers be assigned if and when necessary to regional offices of the United
Nations Organization with the purpose of disseminating information and
offering training and other technical assistance in the field of human
rights upon the request of concerned Member States. Human rights training
for international civil servants who are assigned to work relating to human
rights should be organized.
8. The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the convening of emergency
sessions of the Commission on Human Rights as a positive initiative and
that other ways of responding to acute violations of human rights be considered
by the relevant organs of the United Nations system.
Resources
9. The World Conference on Human Rights, concerned by the growing disparity
between the activities of the Centre for Human Rights and the human, financial
and other resources available to carry them out, and bearing in mind the
resources needed for other important United Nations programmes, requests
the Secretary-General and the General Assembly to take immediate steps
to increase substantially the resources for the human rights programme
from within the existing and future regular budgets of the United Nations,
and to take urgent steps to seek increased extrabudgetary resources.
10. Within this framework, an increased proportion of the regular budget
should be allocated directly to the Centre for Human Rights to cover its
costs and all other costs borne by the Centre for Human Rights, including
those related to the United Nations human rights bodies. Voluntary funding
of the Centre's technical cooperation activities should reinforce this
enhanced budget; the World Conference on Human Rights calls for generous
contributions to the existing trust funds.
11. The World Conference on Human Rights requests the Secretary-General
and the General Assembly to provide sufficient human, financial and other
resources to the Centre for Human Rights to enable it effectively, efficiently
and expeditiously to carry out its activities.
12. The World Conference on Human Rights, noting the need to ensure
that human and financial resources are available to carry out the human
rights activities, as mandated by intergovernmental bodies, urges the SecretaryGeneral,
in accordance with Article 101 of the Charter of the United Nations, and
Member States to adopt a coherent approach aimed at securing that resources
commensurate to the increased mandates are allocated to the Secretariat.
The World Conference on Human Rights invites the Secretary-General to consider
whether adjustments to procedures in the programme budget cycle would be
necessary or helpful to ensure the timely and effective implementation
of human rights activities as mandated by Member States.
Centre for Human Rights
13. The World Conference on Human Rights stresses the importance of
strengthening the United Nations Centre for Human Rights.
14. The Centre for Human Rights should play an important role in coordinating
system-wide attention for human rights. The focal role of the Centre can
best be realized if it is enabled to cooperate fully with other United
Nations bodies and organs. The coordinating role of the Centre for Human
Rights also implies that the office of the Centre for Human Rights in New
York is strengthened.
15. The Centre for Human Rights should be assured adequate means for
the system of thematic and country rapporteurs, experts, working groups
and treaty bodies. Follow-up on recommendations should become a priority
matter for consideration by the Commission on Human Rights.
16. The Centre for Human Rights should assume a larger role in the promotion
of human rights. This role could be given shape through cooperation with
Member States and by an enhanced programme of advisory services and technical
assistance. The existing voluntary funds will have to be expanded substantially
for these purposes and should be managed in a more efficient and coordinated
way. All activities should follow strict and transparent project management
rules and regular programme and project evaluations should be held periodically.
To this end, the results of such evaluation exercises and other relevant
information should be made available regularly. The Centre should, in particular,
organize at least once a year information meetings open to all Member States
and organizations directly involved in these projects and programmes.
Adaptation and strengthening of the United Nations machinery for
human rights, including the question of the establishment of a United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights
17. The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes the necessity for
a continuing adaptation of the United Nations human rights machinery to
the current and future needs in the promotion and protection of human rights,
as reflected in the present Declaration and within the framework of a balanced
and sustainable development for all people. In particular, the United Nations
human rights organs should improve their coordination, efficiency and effectiveness.
18. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends to the General Assembly
that when examining the report of the Conference at its forty-eighth session,
it begin, as a matter of priority, consideration of the question of the
establishment of a High Commissioner for Human Rights for the promotion
and protection of all human rights.
B. Equality, dignity and tolerance
1. Racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and other forms of intolerance
19. The World Conference on Human Rights considers the elimination of
racism and racial discrimination, in particular in their institutionalized
forms such as apartheid or resulting from doctrines of racial superiority
or exclusivity or contemporary forms and manifestations of racism, as a
primary objective for the international community and a worldwide promotion
programme in the field of human rights. United Nations organs and agencies
should strengthen their efforts to implement such a programme of action
related to the third decade to combat racism and racial discrimination
as well as subsequent mandates to the same end. The World Conference on
Human Rights strongly appeals to the international community to contribute
generously to the Trust Fund for the Programme for the Decade for Action
to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination.
20. The World Conference on Human Rights urges all Governments to take
immediate measures and to develop strong policies to prevent and combat
all forms and manifestations of racism, xenophobia or related intolerance,
where necessary by enactment of appropriate legislation, including penal
measures, and by the establishment of national institutions to combat such
phenomena.
21. The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the decision of the
Commission on Human Rights to appoint a Special Rapporteur on contemporary
forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
The World Conference on Human Rights also appeals to all States parties
to the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination to consider making the declaration under article 14 of the
Convention.
22. The World Conference on Human Rights calls upon all Governments
to take all appropriate measures in compliance with their international
obligations and with due regard to their respective legal systems to counter
intolerance and related violence based on religion or belief, including
practices of discrimination against women and including the desecration
of religious sites, recognizing that every individual has the right to
freedom of thought, conscience, expression and religion. The Conference
also invites all States to put into practice the provisions of the Declaration
on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based
on Religion or Belief.
23. The World Conference on Human Rights stresses that all persons who
perpetrate or authorize criminal acts associated with ethnic cleansing
are individually responsible and accountable for such human rights violations,
and that the international community should exert every effort to bring
those legally responsible for such violations to justice.
24. The World Conference on Human Rights calls on all States to take
immediate measures, individually and collectively, to combat the practice
of ethnic cleansing to bring it quickly to an end. Victims of the abhorrent
practice of ethnic cleansing are entitled to appropriate and effective
remedies.
2. Persons belonging to national or ethnic, religious and linguistic
minorities
25. The World Conference on Human Rights calls on the Commission on
Human Rights to examine ways and means to promote and protect effectively
the rights of persons belonging to minorities as set out in the Declaration
on the Rights of Persons belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities. In this context, the World Conference on Human Rights
calls upon the Centre for Human Rights to provide, at the request of Governments
concerned and as part of its programme of advisory services and technical
assistance, qualified expertise on minority issues and human rights, as
well as on the prevention and resolution of disputes, to assist in existing
or potential situations involving minorities.
26. The World Conference on Human Rights urges States and the international
community to promote and protect the rights of persons belonging to national
or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities in accordance with the Declaration
on the Rights of Persons belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities.
27. Measures to be taken, where appropriate, should include facilitation
of their full participation in all aspects of the political, economic,
social, religious and cultural life of society and in the economic progress
and development in their country.
Indigenous people
28. The World Conference on Human Rights calls on the Working Group
on Indigenous Populations of the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination
and Protection of Minorities to complete the drafting of a declaration
on the rights of indigenous people at its eleventh session.
29. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that the Commission
on Human Rights consider the renewal and updating of the mandate of the
Working Group on Indigenous Populations upon completion of the drafting
of a declaration on the rights of indigenous people.
30. The World Conference on Human Rights also recommends that advisory
services and technical assistance programmes within the United Nations
system respond positively to requests by States for assistance which would
be of direct benefit to indigenous people. The World Conference on Human
Rights further recommends that adequate human and financial resources be
made available to the Centre for Human Rights within the overall framework
of strengthening the Centre's activities as envisaged by this document.
31. The World Conference on Human Rights urges States to ensure the
full and free participation of indigenous people in all aspects of society,
in particular in matters of concern to them.
32. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that the General
Assembly proclaim an international decade of the world's indigenous people,
to begin from January 1994, including action-orientated programmes, to
be decided upon in partnership with indigenous people. An appropriate voluntary
trust fund should be set up for this purpose. In the framework of such
a decade, the establishment of a permanent forum for indigenous people
in the United Nations system should be considered.
Migrant workers
33. The World Conference on Human Rights urges all States to guarantee
the protection of the human rights of all migrant workers and their families.
34. The World Conference on Human Rights considers that the creation
of conditions to foster greater harmony and tolerance between migrant workers
and the rest of the society of the State in which they reside is of particular
importance.
35. The World Conference on Human Rights invites States to consider
the possibility of signing and ratifying, at the earliest possible time,
the International Convention on the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members
of Their Families.
3. The equal status and human rights of women
36. The World Conference on Human Rights urges the full and equal enjoyment
by women of all human rights and that this be a priority for Governments
and for the United Nations. The World Conference on Human Rights also underlines
the importance of the integration and full participation of women as both
agents and beneficiaries in the development process, and reiterates the
objectives established on global action for women towards sustainable and
equitable development set forth in the Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development and chapter 24 of Agenda 21, adopted by the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 314
June 1992).
37. The equal status of women and the human rights of women should be
integrated into the mainstream of United Nations system-wide activity.
These issues should be regularly and systematically addressed throughout
relevant United Nations bodies and mechanisms. In particular, steps should
be taken to increase cooperation and promote further integration of objectives
and goals between the Commission on the Status of Women, the Commission
on Human Rights, the Committee for the Elimination of Discrimination against
Women, the United Nations Development Fund for Women, the United Nations
Development Programme and other United Nations agencies. In this context,
cooperation and coordination should be strengthened between the Centre
for Human Rights and the Division for the Advancement of Women.
38. In particular, the World Conference on Human Rights stresses the
importance of working towards the elimination of violence against women
in public and private life, the elimination of all forms of sexual harassment,
exploitation and trafficking in women, the elimination of gender bias in
the administration of justice and the eradication of any conflicts which
may arise between the rights of women and the harmful effects of certain
traditional or customary practices, cultural prejudices and religious extremism.
The World Conference on Human Rights calls upon the General Assembly to
adopt the draft declaration on violence against women and urges States
to combat violence against women in accordance with its provisions. Violations
of the human rights of women in situations of armed conflict are violations
of the fundamental principles of international human rights and humanitarian
law. All violations of this kind, including in particular murder, systematic
rape, sexual slavery, and forced pregnancy, require a particularly effective
response.
39. The World Conference on Human Rights urges the eradication of all
forms of discrimination against women, both hidden and overt. The United
Nations should encourage the goal of universal ratification by all States
of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women by the year 2000. Ways and means of addressing the particularly large
number of reservations to the Convention should be encouraged. Inter
alia, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
should continue its review of reservations to the Convention. States are
urged to withdraw reservations that are contrary to the object and purpose
of the Convention or which are otherwise incompatible with international
treaty law.
40. Treaty monitoring bodies should disseminate necessary information
to enable women to make more effective use of existing implementation procedures
in their pursuits of full and equal enjoyment of human rights and nondiscrimination.
New procedures should also be adopted to strengthen implementation of the
commitment to women's equality and the human rights of women. The Commission
on the Status of Women and the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women should quickly examine the possibility of introducing the
right of petition through the preparation of an optional protocol to the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the decision of the Commission
on Human Rights to consider the appointment of a special rapporteur on
violence against women at its fiftieth session.
41. The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes the importance of
the enjoyment by women of the highest standard of physical and mental health
throughout their life span. In the context of the World Conference on Women
and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women, as well as the Proclamation of Tehran of 1968, the World Conference
on Human Rights reaffirms, on the basis of equality between women and men,
a woman's right to accessible and adequate health care and the widest range
of family planning services, as well as equal access to education at all
levels.
42. Treaty monitoring bodies should include the status of women and
the human rights of women in their deliberations and findings, making use
of genderspecific data. States should be encouraged to supply information
on the situation of women de jure and de facto in their reports
to treaty monitoring bodies. The World Conference on Human Rights notes
with satisfaction that the Commission on Human Rights adopted at its forty-ninth
session resolution 1993/46 of 8 March 1993 stating that rapporteurs and
working groups in the field of human rights should also be encouraged to
do so. Steps should also be taken by the Division for the Advancement of
Women in cooperation with other United Nations bodies, specifically the
Centre for Human Rights, to ensure that the human rights activities of
the United Nations regularly address violations of women's human rights,
including genderspecific abuses. Training for United Nations human rights
and humanitarian relief personnel to assist them to recognize and deal
with human rights abuses particular to women and to carry out their work
without gender bias should be encouraged.
43. The World Conference on Human Rights urges Governments and regional
and international organizations to facilitate the access of women to decisionmaking
posts and their greater participation in the decisionmaking process. It
encourages further steps within the United Nations Secretariat to appoint
and promote women staff members in accordance with the Charter of the United
Nations, and encourages other principal and subsidiary organs of the United
Nations to guarantee the participation of women under conditions of equality.
44. The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the World Conference
on Women to be held in Beijing in 1995 and urges that human rights of women
should play an important role in its deliberations, in accordance with
the priority themes of the World Conference on Women of equality, development
and peace.
4. The rights of the child
45. The World Conference on Human Rights reiterates the principle of
"First Call for Children" and, in this respect, underlines the importance
of major national and international efforts, especially those of the United
Nations Children's Fund, for promoting respect for the rights of the child
to survival, protection, development and participation.
46. Measures should be taken to achieve universal ratification of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child by 1995 and the universal signing
of the World Declaration on the Survival, Protection and Development of
Children and Plan of Action adopted by the World Summit for Children, as
well as their effective implementation. The World Conference on Human Rights
urges States to withdraw reservations to the Convention on the Rights of
the Child contrary to the object and purpose of the Convention or otherwise
contrary to international treaty law.
47. The World Conference on Human Rights urges all nations to undertake
measures to the maximum extent of their available resources, with the support
of international cooperation, to achieve the goals in the World Summit
Plan of Action. The Conference calls on States to integrate the Convention
on the Rights of the Child into their national action plans. By means of
these national action plans and through international efforts, particular
priority should be placed on reducing infant and maternal mortality rates,
reducing malnutrition and illiteracy rates and providing access to safe
drinking water and to basic education. Whenever so called for, national
plans of action should be devised to combat devastating emergencies resulting
from natural disasters and armed conflicts and the equally grave problem
of children in extreme poverty.
48. The World Conference on Human Rights urges all States, with the
support of international cooperation, to address the acute problem of children
under especially difficult circumstances. Exploitation and abuse of children
should be actively combated, including by addressing their root causes.
Effective measures are required against female infanticide, harmful child
labour, sale of children and organs, child prostitution, child pornography,
as well as other forms of sexual abuse.
49. The World Conference on Human Rights supports all measures by the
United Nations and its specialized agencies to ensure the effective protection
and promotion of human rights of the girl child. The World Conference on
Human Rights urges States to repeal existing laws and regulations and remove
customs and practices which discriminate against and cause harm to the
girl child.
50. The World Conference on Human Rights strongly supports the proposal
that the Secretary-General initiate a study into means of improving the
protection of children in armed conflicts. Humanitarian norms should be
implemented and measures taken in order to protect and facilitate assistance
to children in war zones. Measures should include protection for children
against indiscriminate use of all weapons of war, especially anti-personnel
mines. The need for aftercare and rehabilitation of children traumatized
by war must be addressed urgently. The Conference calls on the Committee
on the Rights of the Child to study the question of raising the minimum
age of recruitment into armed forces.
51. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that matters relating
to human rights and the situation of children be regularly reviewed and
monitored by all relevant organs and mechanisms of the United Nations system
and by the supervisory bodies of the specialized agencies in accordance
with their mandates.
52. The World Conference on Human Rights recognizes the important role
played by nongovernmental organizations in the effective implementation
of all human rights instruments and, in particular, the Convention on the
Rights of the Child.
53. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that the Committee
on the Rights of the Child, with the assistance of the Centre for Human
Rights, be enabled expeditiously and effectively to meet its mandate, especially
in view of the unprecedented extent of ratification and subsequent submission
of country reports.
5. Freedom from torture
54. The World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the ratification by
many Member States of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman
or Degrading Treatment or Punishment and encourages its speedy ratification
by all other Member States.
55. The World Conference on Human Rights emphasizes that one of the
most atrocious violations against human dignity is the act of torture,
the result of which destroys the dignity and impairs the capability of
victims to continue their lives and their activities.
56. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms that under human
rights law and international humanitarian law, freedom from torture is
a right which must be protected under all circumstances, including in times
of internal or international disturbance or armed conflicts.
57. The World Conference on Human Rights therefore urges all States
to put an immediate end to the practice of torture and eradicate this evil
forever through full implementation of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights as well as the relevant conventions and, where necessary, strengthening
of existing mechanisms. The World Conference on Human Rights calls on all
States to cooperate fully with the Special Rapporteur on the question of
torture in the fulfilment of his mandate.
58. Special attention should be given to ensure universal respect for,
and effective implementation of, the Principles of Medical Ethics relevant
to the Role of Health Personnel, particularly Physicians, in the Protection
of Prisoners and Detainees against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment adopted by the General Assembly of the
United Nations.
59. The World Conference on Human Rights stresses the importance of
further concrete action within the framework of the United Nations with
the view to providing assistance to victims of torture and ensure more
effective remedies for their physical, psychological and social rehabilitation.
Providing the necessary resources for this purpose should be given high
priority, inter alia, by additional contributions to the United
Nations Voluntary Fund for the Victims of Torture.
60. States should abrogate legislation leading to impunity for those
responsible for grave violations of human rights such as torture and prosecute
such violations, thereby providing a firm basis for the rule of law.
61. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms that efforts to eradicate
torture should, first and foremost, be concentrated on prevention and,
therefore, calls for the early adoption of an optional protocol to the
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment
or Punishment, which is intended to establish a preventive system of regular
visits to places of detention.
Enforced disappearances
62. The World Conference on Human Rights, welcoming the adoption by
the General Assembly of the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons
from Enforced Disappearance, calls upon all States to take effective legislative,
administrative, judicial or other measures to prevent, terminate and punish
acts of enforced disappearances. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms
that it is the duty of all States, under any circumstances, to make investigations
whenever there is reason to believe that an enforced disappearance has
taken place on a territory under their jurisdiction and, if allegations
are confirmed, to prosecute its perpetrators.
6. The rights of the disabled person
63. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirms that all human rights
and fundamental freedoms are universal and thus unreservedly include persons
with disabilities. Every person is born equal and has the same rights to
life and welfare, education and work, living independently and active participation
in all aspects of society. Any direct discrimination or other negative
discriminatory treatment of a disabled person is therefore a violation
of his or her rights. The World Conference on Human Rights calls on Governments,
where necessary, to adopt or adjust legislation to assure access to these
and other rights for disabled persons.
64. The place of disabled persons is everywhere. Persons with disabilities
should be guaranteed equal opportunity through the elimination of all socially
determined barriers, be they physical, financial, social or psychological,
which exclude or restrict full participation in society.
65. Recalling the World Programme of Action concerning Disabled Persons,
adopted by the General Assembly at its thirty-seventh session, the World
Conference on Human Rights calls upon the General Assembly and the Economic
and Social Council to adopt the draft standard rules on the equalization
of opportunities for persons with disabilities, at their meetings in 1993.
C. Cooperation, development and strengthening
of human rights
66. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that priority be
given to national and international action to promote democracy, development
and human rights.
67. Special emphasis should be given to measures to assist in the strengthening
and building of institutions relating to human rights, strengthening of
a pluralistic civil society and the protection of groups which have been
rendered vulnerable. In this context, assistance provided upon the request
of Governments for the conduct of free and fair elections, including assistance
in the human rights aspects of elections and public information about elections,
is of particular importance. Equally important is the assistance to be
given to the strengthening of the rule of law, the promotion of freedom
of expression and the administration of justice, and to the real and effective
participation of the people in the decision-making processes.
68. The World Conference on Human Rights stresses
the need for the implementation of strengthened advisory services and technical
assistance activities by the Centre for Human Rights. The Centre should
make available to States upon request assistance on specific human rights
issues, including the preparation of reports under human rights treaties
as well as for the implementation of coherent and comprehensive plans of
action for the promotion and protection of human rights. Strengthening
the institutions of human rights and democracy, the legal protection of
human rights, training of officials and others, broad-based education and
public information aimed at promoting respect for human rights should all
be available as components of these programmes.
69. The World Conference on Human Rights strongly recommends that a
comprehensive programme be established within the United Nations in order
to help States in the task of building and strengthening adequate national
structures which have a direct impact on the overall observance of human
rights and the maintenance of the rule of law. Such a programme, to be
coordinated by the Centre for Human Rights, should be able to provide,
upon the request of the interested Government, technical and financial
assistance to national projects in reforming penal and correctional establishments,
education and training of lawyers, judges and security forces in human
rights, and any other sphere of activity relevant to the good functioning
of the rule of law. That programme should make available to States assistance
for the implementation of plans of action for the promotion and protection
of human rights.
70. The World Conference on Human Rights requests the Secretary-General
of the United Nations to submit proposals to the United Nations General
Assembly, containing alternatives for the establishment, structure, operational
modalities and funding of the proposed programme.
71. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that each State
consider the desirability of drawing up a national action plan identifying
steps whereby that State would improve the promotion and protection of
human rights.
72. The World Conference on Human Rights on Human Rights reaffirms that
the universal and inalienable right to development, as established in the
Declaration on the Right to Development, must be implemented and realized.
In this context, the World Conference on Human Rights welcomes the appointment
by the Commission on Human Rights of a thematic working group on the right
to development and urges that the Working Group, in consultation and cooperation
with other organs and agencies of the United Nations system, promptly formulate,
for early consideration by the United Nations General Assembly, comprehensive
and effective measures to eliminate obstacles to the implementation and
realization of the Declaration on the Right to Development and recommending
ways and means towards the realization of the right to development by all
States.
73. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that non-governmental
and other grass-roots organizations active in development and/or human
rights should be enabled to play a major role on the national and international
levels in the debate, activities and implementation relating to the right
to development and, in cooperation with Governments, in all relevant aspects
of development cooperation.
74. The World Conference on Human Rights appeals to Governments, competent
agencies and institutions to increase considerably the resources devoted
to building well-functioning legal systems able to protect human rights,
and to national institutions working in this area. Actors in the field
of development cooperation should bear in mind the mutually reinforcing
interrelationship between development, democracy and human rights. Cooperation
should be based on dialogue and transparency. The World Conference on Human
Rights also calls for the establishment of comprehensive programmes, including
resource banks of information and personnel with expertise relating to
the strengthening of the rule of law and of democratic institutions.
75. The World Conference on Human Rights encourages the Commission on
Human Rights, in cooperation with the Committee on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, to continue the examination of optional protocols to the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
76. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that more resources
be made available for the strengthening or the establishment of regional
arrangements for the promotion and protection of human rights under the
programmes of advisory services and technical assistance of the Centre
for Human Rights. States are encouraged to request assistance for such
purposes as regional and subregional workshops, seminars and information
exchanges designed to strengthen regional arrangements for the promotion
and protection of human rights in accord with universal human rights standards
as contained in international human rights instruments.
77. The World Conference on Human Rights supports all measures by the
United Nations and its relevant specialized agencies to ensure the effective
promotion and protection of trade union rights, as stipulated in the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and other relevant international
instruments. It calls on all States to abide fully by their obligations
in this regard contained in international instruments.
D. Human rights education
78. The World Conference on Human Rights considers human rights education,
training and public information essential for the promotion and achievement
of stable and harmonious relations among communities and for fostering
mutual understanding, tolerance and peace.
79. States should strive to eradicate illiteracy and should direct education
towards the full development of the human personality and to the strengthening
of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. The World Conference
on Human Rights calls on all States and institutions to include human rights,
humanitarian law, democracy and rule of law as subjects in the curricula
of all learning institutions in formal and non-formal settings.
80. Human rights education should include peace, democracy, development
and social justice, as set forth in international and regional human rights
instruments, in order to achieve common understanding and awareness with
a view to strengthening universal commitment to human rights.
81. Taking into account the World Plan of Action on Education for Human
Rights and Democracy, adopted in March 1993 by the International Congress
on Education for Human Rights and Democracy of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, and other human rights instruments,
the World Conference on Human Rights recommends that States develop specific
programmes and strategies for ensuring the widest human rights education
and the dissemination of public information, taking particular account
of the human rights needs of women.
82. Governments, with the assistance of intergovernmental organizations,
national institutions and non-governmental organizations, should promote
an increased awareness of human rights and mutual tolerance. The World
Conference on Human Rights underlines the importance of strengthening the
World Public Information Campaign for Human Rights carried out by the United
Nations. They should initiate and support education in human rights and
undertake effective dissemination of public information in this field.
The advisory services and technical assistance programmes of the United
Nations system should be able to respond immediately to requests from States
for educational and training activities in the field of human rights as
well as for special education concerning standards as contained in international
human rights instruments and in humanitarian law and their application
to special groups such as military forces, law enforcement personnel, police
and the health profession. The proclamation of a United Nations decade
for human rights education in order to promote, encourage and focus these
educational activities should be considered.
E. Implementation and monitoring methods
83. The World Conference on Human Rights urges Governments to incorporate
standards as contained in international human rights instruments in domestic
legislation and to strengthen national structures, institutions and organs
of society which play a role in promoting and safeguarding human rights.
84. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends the strengthening
of United Nations activities and programmes to meet requests for assistance
by States which want to establish or strengthen their own national institutions
for the promotion and protection of human rights.
85. The World Conference on Human Rights also encourages the strengthening
of cooperation between national institutions for the promotion and protection
of human rights, particularly through exchanges of information and experience,
as well as cooperation with regional organizations and the United Nations.
86. The World Conference on Human Rights strongly recommends in this
regard that representatives of national institutions for the promotion
and protection of human rights convene periodic meetings under the auspices
of the Centre for Human Rights to examine ways and means of improving their
mechanisms and sharing experiences.
87. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends to the human rights
treaty bodies, to the meetings of chairpersons of the treaty bodies and
to the meetings of States parties that they continue to take steps aimed
at coordinating the multiple reporting requirements and guidelines for
preparing State reports under the respective human rights conventions and
study the suggestion that the submission of one overall report on treaty
obligations undertaken by each State would make these procedures more effective
and increase their impact.
88. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that the States
parties to international human rights instruments, the General Assembly
and the Economic and Social Council should consider studying the existing
human rights treaty bodies and the various thematic mechanisms and procedures
with a view to promoting greater efficiency and effectiveness through better
coordination of the various bodies, mechanisms and procedures, taking into
account the need to avoid unnecessary duplication and overlapping of their
mandates and tasks.
89. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends continued work on
the improvement of the functioning, including the monitoring tasks, of
the treaty bodies, taking into account multiple proposals made in this
respect, in particular those made by the treaty bodies themselves and by
the meetings of the chairpersons of the treaty bodies. The comprehensive
national approach taken by the Committee on the Rights of the Child should
also be encouraged.
90. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that States parties
to human rights treaties consider accepting all the available optional
communication procedures.
91. The World Conference on Human Rights views with concern the issue
of impunity of perpetrators of human rights violations, and supports the
efforts of the Commission on Human Rights and the Sub-Commission on Prevention
of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities to examine all aspects of
the issue.
92. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that the Commission
on Human Rights examine the possibility for better implementation of existing
human rights instruments at the international and regional levels and encourages
the International Law Commission to continue its work on an international
criminal court.
93. The World Conference on Human Rights appeals to States which have
not yet done so to accede to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 and
the Protocols thereto, and to take all appropriate national measures, including
legislative ones, for their full implementation.
94. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends the speedy completion
and adoption of the draft declaration on the right and responsibility of
individuals, groups and organs of society to promote and protect universally
recognized human rights and fundamental freedoms.
95. The World Conference on Human Rights underlines the importance of
preserving and strengthening the system of special procedures, rapporteurs,
representatives, experts and working groups of the Commission on Human
Rights and the Sub-Commission on the Prevention of Discrimination and Protection
of Minorities, in order to enable them to carry out their mandates in all
countries throughout the world, providing them with the necessary human
and financial resources. The procedures and mechanisms should be enabled
to harmonize and rationalize their work through periodic meetings. All
States are asked to cooperate fully with these procedures and mechanisms.
96. The World Conference on Human Rights recommends that the United
Nations assume a more active role in the promotion and protection of human
rights in ensuring full respect for international humanitarian law in all
situations of armed conflict, in accordance with the purposes and principles
of the Charter of the United Nations.
97. The World Conference on Human Rights, recognizing the important
role of human rights components in specific arrangements concerning some
peace-keeping operations by the United Nations, recommends that the Secretary-General
take into account the reporting, experience and capabilities of the Centre
for Human Rights and human rights mechanisms, in conformity with the Charter
of the United Nations.
98. To strengthen the enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights,
additional approaches should be examined, such as a system of indicators
to measure progress in the realization of the rights set forth in the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. There must be a concerted
effort to ensure recognition of economic, social and cultural rights at
the national, regional and international levels.
F. Follow-up to the World Conference on
Human Rights
99. The World Conference on Human Rights on Human Rights
recommends that the General Assembly, the Commission on Human Rights and
other organs and agencies of the United Nations system related to human
rights consider ways and means for the full implementation, without delay,
of the recommendations contained in the present Declaration, including
the possibility of proclaiming a United Nations decade for human rights. The
World Conference on Human Rights further recommends that the Commission
on Human Rights annually review the progress towards this end.
100. The World Conference on Human Rights requests
the Secretary-General of the United Nations to invite on the occasion of
the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights all
States, all organs and agencies of the United Nations system related to
human rights, to report to him on the progress made in the implementation
of the present Declaration and to submit a report to the General Assembly
at its fifty-third session, through the Commission on Human Rights and
the Economic and Social Council. Likewise, regional and, as appropriate,
national human rights institutions, as well as non-governmental organizations,
may present their views to the SecretaryGeneral on the progress made in
the implementation of the present Declaration. Special attention should
be paid to assessing the progress towards the goal of universal ratification
of international human rights treaties and protocols adopted within the
framework of the United Nations system.
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