- UN rights chief says transitional justice 'crucial' in Syria
- US consumer inflation rises to 2.9 percent in December
- Germany's Thiaw to miss Juve and Champions League clashes with hamstring injury: AC Milan
- France name Jegou, Auradou in Six Nations squad
- Lategan back on top as Roma hands Ford first Dakar stage win in 10 years
- Mozambique's new president vows 'unity' as sworn in amid deadly protests
- Russia PM meets Vietnam president, seeking deeper ties
- 'New blood is coming': Mensik dumps Ruud out of Australian Open
- Syria sex abuse survivors need aid, says Nobel winner Mukwege
- Hammers boss Potter ready to make do and mend amid striker shortage
- Zverev cruises into Australian Open third round
- Ancelotti demands Real Madrid response after Clasico drubbing
- Serve better! Gauff outlines must-do for next Melbourne clash
- Benn and Eubank Jr boxing bout set to finally take place in London in April
- German economy shrinks again amid political crisis
- Spain hosted record 94 mn foreign tourists in 2024
- Thai PM says nearly fell for foreign leader phone scam
- European stocks climb as inflation takes centre stage
- Teenager Mensik sends sixth seed Ruud crashing out of Australian Open
- Russia strikes Ukraine energy sites in 'massive' barrage
- Dyche says Everton exit came at 'the right time'
- Australia mulls 'all options' after citizen reported killed by Russian forces
- Djokovic creates slice of history as Zheng stunned in Melbourne
- Gauff overcomes wobble to roll into Australian Open last 32
- BP nears deals for oil fields, curbs on gas flaring in Iraq
- Mozambique inaugurates new president after deadly post-election unrest
- Syrian activists work to avoid return to dictatorship
- Holy dips at India's giant Hindu festival come with challenge
- Thousands to be evacuated after Mount Ibu eruption
- 'Thrilled': Record-setting Djokovic trumps Federer on way to round three
- Alcaraz, Djokovic tip 'incredible' teenager Fonseca for the top
- Cocaine use nearly doubles in France: study
- Beijing 'firmly opposes' US ban on smart cars with Chinese tech
- Equities mixed as US inflation, China data loom
- UK inflation dips, easing some pressure on government
- India's triple naval launch shows 'self-reliance': Modi
- Wallabies great Hooper set for comeback aged 33 with Japan move
- German bourse banks on Trump-fuelled crypto boom
- Record 36.8 million tourists visited Japan in 2024
- Trump's policies won't push up inflation, economic advisor says
- German far-right AfD takes aim at Bauhaus movement
- Djokovic makes slice of history as Zheng stunned in Melbourne
- The journalists behind Sarkozy's Libya corruption woes
- SpaceX set for seventh test of Starship megarocket
- Record-setting Djokovic trumps Federer on way to Melbourne third round
- Private US, Japanese lunar landers launch on single rocket
- Spanish youth ditch dating apps for 'real life' love
- Pakistan plot spin blitz as West Indies return after 19 years
- Alcaraz tips 'incredible' Fonseca to be among world's best 'soon'
- Stunned Zheng blames lack of warm-up for early Melbourne exit
Universal Declaration of Human Rights turns 75
On December 10, 1948, the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in the hope of creating a better world after the horrors of World War II.
Coming three years after the Allied victory over the Nazis, it was the first time that countries had agreed to protect fundamental rights and freedoms on a universal scale, for all people.
It was also one of the first achievements of the United Nations, itself born from the ashes of the Second World War, and inspired the development of international human rights law.
Its adoption in Paris was hailed with a lengthy standing ovation from delegates determined that the world would never again see the likes of Auschwitz, Hiroshima and other atrocities.
Although not legally binding, the declaration stresses the supremacy of individual rights over those of states.
It puts economic, social and cultural freedoms on the same level as civil and political rights.
Human rights were no longer exclusively an internal affair, as Hitler had claimed to prevent foreign interference. They were now a universal issue.
On the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the milestone charter, here is some historical background.
- Divided world seeks consensus -
The UN's first General Assembly in 1946 created a Commission on Human Rights -- made up of 18 members from various political, cultural and religious backgrounds -- to work on an international bill of rights.
The drafting committee first met in 1947 under the dynamic chairmanship of Eleanor Roosevelt, widow of the US president Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Its other representatives were from eight countries selected according to their geographical location, with Canada's John Peters Humphrey and France’s Rene Cassin playing key roles in the drafting.
"It is the first document of an ethical sort that organised humanity has ever adopted," recalled Cassin.
It was inspired by the principles behind the United States Declaration of Independence of 1776 and France’s Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789.
Several women played key roles in the drafting, namely Hansa Mehta, a fervent advocate of women's rights in India and abroad.
She is widely credited with changing Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights from "All men are born free and equal" to "All human beings are born free and equal".
The declaration was adopted by the UN's third General Assembly in Paris on December 10, 1948.
It was supported by 48 of the UN's then 58 member countries.
Two others -- Yemen and Honduras -- were absent.
The remaining eight abstained -- Belarus, Czechoslovakia, Poland, the Soviet Union, Ukraine, Yugoslavia, apartheid South Africa and Saudi Arabia, which challenged the notion that men and women were equal.
- Inspiring but contested -
"At a time when the world was divided into Eastern and Western blocs, finding a common ground on what should make the essence of the document proved to be a colossal task," the UN says on its website.
Communists said there was an over-emphasis on individual and political rights at the expense of social rights.
Western democracies were wary of the declaration becoming a restrictive legal tool that could be used against them by their own their colonies.
Despite the doubts and debates at the time, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights inspired all post-war treaties and is regarded as the foundation of international human rights law.
The international conventions against the discrimination of women in 1979 and against torture in 1984; the rights of children in 1990; the creation of the International Criminal Court in 1998 -- all are its direct descendants.
It also inspired the "right to intervene" in another country on humanitarian grounds, as championed by former French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner, who co-founded Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
But the declaration has not been able to prevent violations of the rights it espouses.
Nor has it escaped criticism, including that the concept of "universalism" is little more than a Western diktat.
And it has met ideological, cultural and religious resistance from various countries, such as China and Russia as well as those that apply Islamic Sharia law.
Seventy-five years after its adoption, there are calls for the declaration to be updated, for example, to incorporate challenges such as climate change, mass migration and modern technologies.
Bur-cf-ccd-rap/mw/eab/gil/bp
D.Sawyer--AMWN