|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
News December 2007
Adventist Church's UN Rep Calls for Greater Emphasis on Fundamental Human Rights New York, NY The Seventh-day Adventist Church's representative to the United Nations called today December 10 for "a greater emphasis on fundamental human rights, both in society and in the church." Dr Jonathan Gallagher was speaking at the launch on Human Rights Day in New York of a year-long UN program designed to re-affirm rights and freedoms ahead of the 60th anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights. "Sadly since 1948 and the implementation of the Universal Declaration we have seen much good talk and theory, but we still have many problems in the area of human rights. All around the world people are suffering because their basic rights are being trampled on. In no area is this clearer than in religious freedom, with persecution and intolerance still high on the agenda of violations that need to be halted." Gallagher pointed to ongoing denials of freedom of religion in such countries as Saudi Arabia, North Korea, the Maldives, Eritrea, Cambodia, Vietnam, China, Turkmenistan and other central Asian countries. "While we celebrate what has been achieved over the past sixty years since the Declaration, we can't be blind to the increasing challenges to the right to freedom of belief and worship," Gallagher said. "As a church we remain totally committed to freedom of conscience, and call on everyone to work together to make sure human rights are valued in practice, and not just in theory." Speaking at a pre-launch
meeting on December 6, Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Deputy Permanent Representative
of France to the UN, whose mission is co-sponsoring the program, said
that while "the Declaration was not the final point, and everything
was not yet achieved," the anniversary was "an opportunity to
reaffirm the universality of human rights."
|
|
|||
|
Copyright
@ 2007 Public Affairs and Religious Liberty Department, General Conference
of Seventh-day Adventists
|
||||