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SG/SM/13994-HR/5078-OBV/1063

Still Too Much Repression in World, but ‘Let Us Take Strength’ from Achievements of 2011, Ever-Spreading Awareness of Rights, Says Secretary-General in Message

5 December 2011
Secretary-GeneralSG/SM/13994
HR/5078
OBV/1063
Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York

Still Too Much Repression in World, but ‘Let Us Take Strength’ from Achievements

 

of 2011, Ever-Spreading Awareness of Rights, Says Secretary-General in Message

 


Following is UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s message for Human Rights Day, observed on 10 December:


Human rights belong to every one of us without exception.  But unless we know them, unless we demand they be respected, and unless we defend our right — and the right of others — to exercise them, they will be just words in a decades-old document.


That is why, on Human Rights Day, we do more than celebrate the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 — we acknowledge its enduring relevance for our own times.


The importance of human rights has been underlined over and over again this year.  Across the globe, people mobilized to demand justice, dignity, equality, participation — the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration.


Many of these peaceful demonstrators persevered despite being met with violence and further repression.  In some countries, the struggle continues; in others, important concessions were gained or dictators were toppled as the will of the people prevailed.


Many of the people seeking their legitimate aspirations were linked through social media.  Gone are the days when repressive Governments could totally control the flow of information.  Today, within their existing obligation to respect the rights of freedom of assembly and expression, Governments must not block access to the Internet and various forms of social media as a way to prevent criticism and public debate.


We know there is still too much repression in our world, still too much impunity, still too many people for whom rights are not yet a reality.  Yet at the end of an extraordinary year for human rights, let us take strength from the achievements of 2011:  new democratic transitions set in motion, new steps to ensure accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity, new and ever-spreading awareness of rights themselves. 


As we look to the challenges ahead, let us take inspiration from the example of human rights activists and the timeless power of the Universal Declaration, and do our utmost to uphold the ideals and aspirations that speak for every culture and every person.


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For information media • not an official record
For information media. Not an official record.