NEW DELHI: President Droupadi Murmu inaugurated the two-day conference of the National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) of Asia Pacific and said that India and other nations of the Asia Pacific are civilizational protectors of human rights and can play a role in evolving an international consensus on related issues.
Drawing attention to the issue of climate change impacting human rights, she exhorted to conserve and enrich nature before it is too late.
She was inaugurating the two-day conference of the National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) of Asia Pacific organized by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), in collaboration with the Asia Pacific Forum at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi.
The President said that India has a long historical experience of practising and cherishing democratic values and individual rights. It adopted universal adult franchise rights since the inception of the republic. “We ensured a minimum 33 per cent reservation for women in local bodies and a proposal is taking shape to have the same in assemblies and parliament,” she said.
Earlier in his keynote address, the NHRC, India, Chairperson Justice Arun Mishra said that the NHRIs of the Asia Pacific need a joint strategy for the emerging challenges to Human Rights protection in areas of climate change, child trafficking, Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) and other crimes in cyberspace, the latest developments in Artificial Intelligence, among others.
He said that the concentration of wealth in a few hands globally is causing a brooding sense of injustice. We must ensure that workers involved in various economic activities are provided humane working conditions.
He said that business houses must be responsible for processing waste and removing debris from their premises. He said that in the matter of essential health issues, the intellectual property right must adopt a right-based approach in essential health services in the public interest.
He also strongly pitched in for ensuring gender justice for women and the LGBTQI community besides liberalising the concept of reasonable opportunity for the specially-abled.
The conference including the Annual General Meeting (AGM) on September 20, 2023, followed by the Biennial Conference will celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights (UDHR) and 30 years of National Human Rights Institutions and the Paris Principles, with a sub-theme on the environment and climate change.
It is being attended by Heads, members, and senior officials of the NHRIs of the Asia Pacific region, observer countries along with representatives from the Union and State governments, State Human Rights Commissions, Special Rapporteurs, Monitors, various institutions involved in the protection and promotion of human rights in the country, members of civil society and NGOs, human right defenders, lawyers, jurists, academicians, diplomats, representatives of international organizations, and academic institutions.
NHRC is also hosting an international seminar on ‘Business and Human Rights’ for the development of strategies to ensure that businesses prioritize human rights and environmental sustainability in their operations. (ANI)