Skip to main content

Press releases

ARAB COUNTRIES TO MEET IN CAIRO TO DISCUSS STRENGTHENING OF RIGHTS PROMOTION AND PROTECTION

04 March 2005

4 March 2005



National institutions, Government and civil society representatives from throughout the Arab region will meet in Cairo from 6 to 8 March to discuss the establishment or strengthening of national institutions for the promotion and protection of human rights (NHRIs).

The three-day international conference on the building of national human rights protection systems is being convened by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the National Council for Human Rights of Egypt (NCHR) and the United Nations Development Programme, in cooperation with the League of Arab States (LAS).

The conference will bring together representatives of NHRIs and human rights and justice ministries of members of the LAS. The meeting will also include representatives of NHRIs from outside the Arab region as well as non-governmental organizations with consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit, LAS Secretary-General Amr Moussa and Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights Mehr Khan Williams will open the conference.

Conference Goals

The objectives of the Conference are to:

· raise awareness among participants on the Paris Principles, the guiding standards for NHRIs relating to independence; accessibility; pluralism, broadly-based mandates and cooperation with others;
· exchange experiences on NHRIs and gather lessons learned from other regions; and
· encourage the strengthening of existing institutions in conformity with the Paris Principles and the establishment of Paris Principle-based institutions in countries where such institutions are non-existent.

Enhancing National Protection Systems

The enhancement of national protection systems is a priority of the Secretary-General’s reform programme. In 2002 the Secretary-General wrote, “Building strong human rights institutions at the country level is what in the long run will ensure that human rights are protected and advanced in a sustained manner. The emplacement or enhancement of a national protection system in each country, reflecting international human rights norms, should therefore be a principal objective of the [United Nations] Organization” (document A/57/387 of 9 September 2002).

The conference will open on Sunday, 6 March at 10 a.m. in the Teeba Hall of the Hotel Semiaramis Intercontinental. For further information contact José Luis Díaz: +41 22 917 9242

Tags