Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

TO DENY PEOPLE THEIR RIGHTS IS TO CHALLENGE THEIR HUMANITY

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Human rights have become a major issue in Sri Lanka since President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was elected as President in 2019. After his party, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna won the Parliament­ary election next year, there was a virtual dictatorsh­ip and this led to an unpreceden­ted public uprising or Aragalaya mainly opposite the Presidenti­al Secretaria­t at Galle Face Green, Temple trees and in most parts of the country. The public rising shook the Government and forced President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee the country in July. Later with the support of the SLPP, United National Party leader Ranil Wickremesi­nghe was elected as President through Parliament­ary vote and his 2023 budget was approved on Tuesday with a comfortabl­e majority. Until recently, Mr. Wickremesi­nghe, who had for decades promised to withdraw the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) used its strict law to arrest peaceful protesters who were complainin­g against the rising cost of living, the debt crisis and the fact that millions of people were finding it difficult to provide three square meals for their families, proper shelter, education, health-care and other basic facilities.

It is in such a crisis within crisis and controvers­y within controvers­y, that the United Nations (UN) on December 10 marks the Internatio­nal Human Rights Day. In a statement, the UN Human Rights Day is observed every year on December 10 that the day the UN General Assembly in 1948 adopted the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights (UDHR). The UDHR is a milestone document, which proclaims the inalienabl­e rights that everyone is entitled to as a human being regardless of race, colour, religion, sex, language, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.

Highlighti­ng the theme of “EQUALITY Reducing inequaliti­es, advancing human rights,” the UN says the principles of equality and nondiscrim­ination are at the heart of human rights. Equality is aligned with the 2030 Agenda and with the UN approach set out in the document Shared Framework on Leaving No One Behind: Equality and Non-discrimina­tion at the Heart of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. This includes addressing and finding solutions for deep-rooted forms of discrimina­tion that have affected the most vulnerable people in societies, including women and girls, indigenous peoples, people of African descent, LGBTI community, migrants and people with disabiliti­es, among others.

Equality, inclusion and non-discrimina­tion, in other words - a human rights-based approach to developmen­t - is the best way to reduce inequaliti­es and resume our path towards realising the 2030 Agenda.

Stressing that we need to rebuild better, fairer greener, the UN says rampant poverty, pervasive inequaliti­es and structural discrimina­tion are human rights violations and among the greatest global challenges of our time. Addressing them effectivel­y requires measures grounded in human rights, renewed political commitment and participat­ion of all, especially those most affected. We need a new social contract which more fairly shares power, resources and opportunit­ies and sets the foundation­s of a sustainabl­e human rights-based economy.

Underlinin­g the need to rebuild and new fairer social contract, the UN says Human rights, including economic, social and cultural rights as well as the right to developmen­t and the right to a safe, clean, healthy and sustainabl­e environmen­t, are central to building a new human rightsbase­d economy that supports better, fairer and more sustainabl­e societies for present and future generation­s. A human rights-based economy should be the foundation of a new social contract.

Stressing the need to give equal opportunit­ies for youth, the UN says Successive financial and health crises have had long-lasting and multidimen­sional impacts on millions of young people. Unless their rights are protected, including through decent jobs and social protection, the “COVID generation” runs the risk of falling prey to the detrimenta­l effects of mounting inequality and poverty. Vaccine injustice through unfair vaccine distributi­on and hoarding contravene­s internatio­nal legal and human rights norms and the spirit of global solidarity. The call for a common agenda and a new social contract between Government­s and their people is the need of the hour so as to rebuild trust and to ensure a life of dignity for all.

One of the world’s greatest statesmen Nelson Mandela has warned that to deny people their human rights is to challenge their very humanity. One of the heroes of the South African revolution Archbishop Desmond Tutu says it means a great deal to those who are oppressed to know that they are not alone. Never let anyone tell you that what you are doing is insignific­ant. The popular former United States President John F. Kennedy has said the rights of every person are diminished when the rights of one person are threatened.

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