On this Human Rights Day, we
launch a year-long commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights. The entire UN family will
take part in a campaign to promote the Declaration's ideals and principles of
justice and equality for everyone.
The campaign reminds us that in
a world still reeling from the horrors of the Second World War, the Declaration
was the first global statement of what we now take for granted -- the inherent
dignity and equality of all human beings.
The
extraordinary vision and determination of the drafters produced a document that
for the first time set out universal human rights for all
people in an individual context. Now available
in more than 360 languages, the Declaration is the most translated document in
the world -- a testament to its universal nature and reach. It has inspired the constitutions of many newly independent States and
many new democracies. It has become a yardstick by which we measure respect for
what we know, or should know, as right and wrong.
The Declaration
remains as relevant today as it did on the day it was adopted. But the fundamental freedoms enshrined in it are still
not a reality for everyone. Too often,
Governments lack the political will to implement international norms they have
willingly accepted.
This anniversary year is an
occasion to build up that will. It is a chance to ensure that these rights
are a living reality -- that they are known, understood and enjoyed by everyone,
everywhere. It is often those who most need their human rights protected, who
also need to be informed that the Declaration exists -- and that it exists for
them.
May this year reinvigorate us in that mission. Let us
make the Universal Declaration of Human Rights an integral part of everyone's
life.