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- Info
e972901
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issue
97
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april/june 2001
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HUMAN RIGHTS AND
ENVIRONMENT OFFICIALLY LINKED
In April, the UN Commission on Human Rights
concluded that everyone has the right to
live in a world free from toxic pollution
and environmental degradation. The
decision, the first time the Commission has
addressed the links between the environment
and human rights, was made at its 2001
annual meeting.
Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of the
United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP), welcomed the historic move, saying:
"Many of the fundamental rights enshrined
in the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights have significant environmental
dimensions. Environmental conditions
clearly help to determine the extent to
which
people enjoy their basic rights to life,
health, adequate food and housing, and
traditional livelihood and culture. It is
time to recognize that those who pollute or
destroy the natural environment are not
just committing a crime against nature, but
are violating human rights as well."
"Human rights cannot be secured in a
degraded or polluted environment", he
continued. "The fundamental right to life
is threatened by soil degradation and
deforestation and by exposures to toxic
chemicals, hazardous wastes and
contaminated drinking water. For this
reason, we believe that the successful
implementation of international
environmental treaties on biodiversity,
climate change, desertification and
chemicals can make a major contribution to
protecting human rights.”
Information from the UN Environmental
Programme.
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