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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!sgigate!sgi!cdp!hrcoord
- From: hrcoord@igc.apc.org (Human Rights Coordinator)
- Newsgroups: soc.rights.human
- Subject: MINORITIES: Too late, a declaration
- Message-ID: <1476700901@igc.apc.org>
- Date: 20 Dec 92 15:21:00 GMT
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Lines: 155
- Nf-ID: #N:cdp:1476700901:000:6762
- Nf-From: cdp.UUCP!hrcoord Dec 20 07:21:00 1992
-
-
- From: Human Rights Coordinator <hrcoord>
- Subject: MINORITIES: Too late, a declaration
-
- /* Written 12:03 am Dec 20, 1992 by newsdesk@igc.apc.org in
- igc:ips.englibrary */ Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all
- rights reserved. Permission to re- print within 7 days of
- original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: MINORITIES: Too late, a declaration of minority rights
-
- an inter press service feature
-
- by candy gourlay
-
- london, dec 17 (ips) -- ironically, it was yugoslavia that in 1978
- produced the blueprint for its own salvation.
-
- conscious of the tensions among its serb, croat and bosnian
- populations, the former yugoslav state authored the first draft of
- a united nations declaration on the rights of minorities, the
- first instrument in the u.n.'s history ever to offer protection to
- minorities.
-
- but the declaration's signing this week by the u.n. general
- assembly has come too late to prevent yugoslavia's disintegration
- into a chaos tragically dominated by bloody ''ethnic cleansing''
- to redraw borders on ethnic lines.
-
- ''the declaration has until now been resisted by several countries
- who saw it as a threat to territorial integrity,'' says a
- statement from the london-based minority rights group (mrg), which
- has for years lobbied to raise international awareness of the
- plight of minority groups.
-
- ''however, the majority of countries have recognised the need to
- address minority issues before they become a threat and have
- accepted the new instrument as a framework for political
- dialogue.''
-
- ''i think the most important result of this whole process is the
- understanding that by securing minority rights, you defuse
- tensions between communities,'' says christine bloch, head of the
- mrg's advocacy group.
-
- the declaration's signing becomes all the more poignant in the
- light of a wave of ethnic violence currently engulfing europe --
- from neo-nazi skinheads attacking asylum seekers in germany to an
- emergence of anti-semitic feeling in eastern european states.
-
- yet resistance to the declaration was led by the very western
- states now poised on the brink of a politically and militarily
- expensive intervention in the conflict in former yugoslavia.
-
- the western military alliance nato (north atlantic treaty
- organisation) this week will be refining battle plans designed to
- halt the spread of fighting in the troubled balkan states.
-
- even the united nations -- through its secretary-general boutros
- boutros-ghali -- is exerting pressure on the west to overcome
- months of political inertia to force peace on the warring
- parties.
-
- minorities: too late, a declaration of minority rights(2)
-
- the change of heart happened with the slow realisation among
- europe's richest nations that the conflict -- so far contained
- within the bounds of the newly formed states of bosnia-
- hercegovina, croatia and serbia, could well spill over to the as
- yet unrecognised neighboring state of macedonia, where the ethnic
- albanian minority are in terror of more ''ethnic cleansing'' by
- serbians.
-
- ''the worst may be still to come,'' warns jonathan eyal, the
- director of studies at the royal united services institute in
- london. ''if russia ultimately enforces its claim to defend its
- kinsmen in former soviet republics, yugoslavia's war will seem
- mere child's play.''
-
- in a recent article for the independent newspaper, eyal criticises
- the west's paralysis in the face of ethnic turbulence for
- ''promoting precisely what everyone sought to avoid''.
-
- ''borders are melting down and east european governments which
- tried to swim against the nationalist wave -- such as hungary's
- and czechoslovakia's -- are now engulfed by ethnic froth,'' eyal
- writes.
-
- ''there is a way out of the dilemma. it does not require much
- cash, or the creation of new institutions. all it needs is a
- vision and political will, admittedly commodities in short supply
- today.''
-
- key to this vision is the state's willingness to accord special
- group rights to minorities in order to safeguard their existence.
-
- but though there is a way, there is little will among leading
- european countries to enforce such safeguards.
-
- ''no, no, it is quite clear that political will does not exist in
- the west to implement minority rights,'' says bloch. ''they are
- aware on the one hand that something has to be done for minority
- issues. on the other hand, they are very much afraid because they
- see it as a threat to the whole system.''
-
- a newly emergent eastern europe, free from the restrictive
- parameters of the cold war, is well represented in the list of
- sponsoring states for the new declaration on minority rights --
- sponsors include the czech and slovak federal republic, greece,
- hungary, poland and the russian federation.
-
- ''eastern europe is more open because they are actually facing the
- problems on their own doorstep. they are aware of the problems and
- they know that they will have to deal with the problems,'' says
- bloch.
-
- ''so is the west, but they will only deal with them in the areas
- where they see the major issues coming up. the west can see that
- in creating mechanisms to preserve minority rights in eastern
- europe, they will have to create the same mechanisms at home.''
-
- minorities: too late, a declaration of minority rights(3-e)
-
- thus the way forward has been frustratingly slow. the u.n.
- declaration, drafted in 1978, is finally tabled before the general
- assembly 14 years later.
-
- the csce (conference on security and co-operation in europe) first
- mentions national minorities in the helsinki final act of 1975,
- but waits 17 years before appointing its first high commissioner
- on national minorities -- the former dutch foreign minister max
- van der stoel, appointed this week.
-
- the u.n.'s new instrument for minority rights, as a mere
- declaration, has no force as law in itself. but rights campaigners
- hope that, like the u.n. declaration on human rights of 1968, the
- new declaration on minority rights will be empowered by its use
- and application.
-
- ''the declaration is not a legally binding document, which then
- makes it a political statement rather than anything else,''
- explains bloch, ''but because the (various u.n. committees) have
- adopted it by consensus, we can expect unanimous approval in the
- plenary session as well -- and if everybody in the u.n. agrees to
- its principles, it can be seen as legally binding.''
-
- still, the path to full minority rights is somehow littered with
- more obstacles for the west than for the east.
-
- ''you've got the united kingdom and its problem with northern
- ireland; you've got germany and its migrant communities; you've
- got the french and their refusal to accept that france has any
- national minorities,'' says bloch. ''they are moving slowly
- towards accepting minority rights, but they are not ready.''
- (end/ips/hr/cg/mf/92)
-