Globo Diplo

A Human Rights forum with Credibility? The Oslo Freedom Forum

June 17, 2009 · Leave a Comment

A little chatter during the Presidential debate alternatives to the UN but the real story since then has been the impact of non-UN multilateral institutions, such as the G77 or G20.  Here’s a new one on the human rights front, brought to light by John Fund of WSJ:

Tiananmen was very much on the minds of the 200 human-rights activists who gathered in this tidy capital city where the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded every year. But the Oslo Freedom Forum, organized by the New York-based Human Rights Foundation, was unlike any human-rights conference I’ve ever attended. As at other such gatherings, racism and gender discrimination were on the minds of plenty of participants. But there was no desire to blame such problems on the U.S. or other Western nations. The emphasis was on promoting basic rights in all nations at all times.

“It’s pretty simple,” says Thor Halvorssen, a human-rights activist and the conference’s 33-year-old founder. “We all should want freedom of speech, freedom of association, freedom from torture, freedom to travel, due process and freedom to keep what belongs to you.” Unfortunately, he explains, “the human-rights establishment at the United Nations is limited to pretty words because so many member countries kill or imprison or torture their opponents.”

via Human Rights Beyond Ideology – WSJ.com.

Categories: international law
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