ICPD Human Rights Conference Points Way Towards Equality, Dignity for All – Recommendations and Conclusions
Saturday, July 13, 2013 at 7:26PM
Richard in ICPD Beyond 2014

 

(from UNFPA Press release, 10 July 2013:

During the ICPD International Conference on Human Rights recommendations were developed over three days by representatives of government, parliaments and civil society groups on how to ensure equality and protect the rights of every person. 

A summary was presented at the closing ceremony by Marijke Wijnroks, the conference chair and Dutch Ambassador for Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in the chair’s reflections on the conference.

 

Ambassador Wijnroks said, “We have been on a long journey in just three days to accelerate progress towards equality, quality of care and accountability.” She then addressed each of these elements and explained how they could be attained.

On equality, she said women and girls living in poverty lack access to sexual and reproductive services, information and education. Moreover, many of these women and girls, including those with higher incomes, face multiple forms of discrimination.

Participants at the conference underlined the fact that adolescents, particularly girls, in nearly all societies face serious barriers in exercising their rights to comprehensive sexuality education and to sexual and reproductive health services.
According to Ambassador Wijnroks, “Grave concerns were voiced about discrimination, violence and human rights violations against LGBTI individuals.” During the conference, she said, “Calls were raised to treat all human beings with dignity and respect” and added “redressing all of these profound inequalities, affecting billions of the world’s population, must be an urgent priority.”

 

In summarizing views on quality of care, the chair said that participants had agreed that the right to health required that education, information and services must be available, accessible, affordable, acceptable and of good quality, without discrimination, coercion or violence. Participants recommended these could be attained by:

According to Ambassador Wijnroks, “This includes services such as counselling, emergency obstetric care, safe abortion services and HIV prevention and treatment, as well as services addressing gender-based violence,”

Referring to accountability, the chair said participants felt it required national leadership and an enabling environment for civil society. They had also said that States must enact policies and programmes with clear goals and budget allocations that can be monitored. States must also prevent human rights violations and ensure all victims’ right to effective remedy and reparations.

Looking to the future and beyond 2014, she concluded: “The unfulfilled ICPD commitments to provide universal access to sexual and reproductive health, and to protect and fulfill the human rights of all, with special attention to disadvantaged and marginalized groups, must be at the heart of global agendas. This should result in enhancing the autonomy and dignity of individuals.”

In his closing remarks, Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, UNFPA Executive Director, said that the best practices identified at the forum for a world in which everyone counts equally and in which every individual life was valued equally “define a renewed agenda for change, of which we can all be proud.”

His remarks were read by Kate Gilmore, UNFPA Deputy Executive Director (Programme), who said: “The direction forward lies in ensuring that we address and tackle the issues of persistent inequalities still experienced by so many women, girls and marginalized and excluded groups. Around the world, it is their freedom of expression; their right to information, to participation; their right to be free from discrimination and violence and their right to the highest attainable standard of health, including their sexual and reproductive health, that we must respect, protect and fulfill, and it is our accountability to them from which we must not waver.”

For further information, please contact:

Abubakar Dungus, UNFPA +1 646 226 2160, dungus[at]unfpa.org
Omar Gharzeddine, UNFPA +1 917 815 7823, gharzeddine[at]unfpa.org
Anita Wiseman, UNFPA/ICPD Secretariat, wiseman[at]unfpa.org

See al so: http://www.unfpa.org/public/home/news/pid/14600#sthash.hbBjpNkv.dpuf

Note from NGOs Beyond 2014... this important conference will feed into the process for the ICPD Beyond 2014 Operational Review, on which we will continue to provide information as it comes available.

 

Article originally appeared on NGOs Beyond 2014 (http://ngosbeyond2014.org/).
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