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Human Rights Nexus Wire

  Week 28 August - 8 September, 2010

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Check out our selection of human rights news from the past week!

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International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition

 

international_slavery_day.jpgThe International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition was first initiated in 1998 by UNESCO. It is intended to inscribe the tragedy of the slave trade in the memory of all peoples. The date is of particular importance: In the night of 22 to 23 August 1791, an uprising began in today's Haiti that played a crucial role in the abolition of transatlantic slave trade. Every year, cultural activities are organized around the globe to remember this event. UNESCO's "Slave Route" project helps to understand the history of slave trade and therewith fills the silence of the past.

HR Treaty Bodies Newsletter

hrtd_newsletter_cover.jpg Check out the latest Human Rights Treaty Bodies Newsletter!

 The Newsletter features analysis, interviews, reports from the field and ways to engage with the Human Rights Treaty division of OHCHR. 

Human Rights Commission begins its 13th session with high-level segment PDF

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The Human Rights Council opened its Thirteenth session on 1 March 2010, hearing from 17 high-level dignitaries. The High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, in her opening statement said that in order to counter deeply-rooted and chronic human rights conditions in many countries, five years ago the UN had initiated a process of reform that proposed several innovations including the creation of the Human Rights Council to replace the Commission.  The Council is a conceived forum where responses to inequality, repression, and impunity can be crafted and advocated to build a world in larger freedom. The High Commissioner's view of the council would help the international community to assess whether the fundamental principles of this body's mandate had be solidly and consistently upheld. 

In the afternoon, the session heard statements from six dignitaries under its high-level segment and then held a high-level panel discussion on the impact of the global economic and financial crisis on the effective enjoyment of all human rights.

On 2 March 2010 the council continued its High-Level Segment.  Statements were heard from the Philippines, Switzerland, UK, Vietnam and Korea and Serbia.  This was followed by a panel discussion on the draft declaration on Human Rights, Education and Training. 

In the afternoon, the high-level segment continued, hearing from a further 14 dignitaries who raised a number of issues such as the 2011 Review of the Council and its mechanisms and what it should focus on, as well as the lack of progress on the elimination of racism around the world, and who highlighted national efforts to promote and protect human rights.

On 3 March, the Council continued with hearing addresses by 13 dignitaries who outlined a number of human rights issues that required ongoing attention from the Council such as racism, poverty, aggravated by financial and economic crises, continued violations of the rights of women and girls, including female genital mutilation, human rights education and training and the interplay between freedom of expression and new media and technology. 

The afternoon saw the conclusion of the HRC High-Level Segment hearing addresses by countries highlighting the measures they had undertaken to improve the human rights situation at a national level.  The Council then began its General Segment during which State representatives expressed their views on the Council's achievements and highlighted their priorities in the context of the upcoming five-year review of the Council's functioning.

 

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More information on the 13th Session of the Human Rights Council is available on the OHCHR website.

Return to the main page for the Human Rights Council on Human Rights Nexus.

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