* News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty
International *
News Service: 237/98
AI INDEX: ACT 30/26/98

Fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Paris -- 10 December 1998 -- As governments around the world today
celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, Amnesty International called on leaders around the world to make
all human rights a reality for all.

Far from celebrating the role of governments, the organization said it
would be celebrating the work of human rights defenders around the world
who continue to be persecuted for trying to bring about the better world
promised by governments in 1948.

"Today should be a day of shame for many governments," said Pierre San�,
Secretary General of Amnesty International. "A sense of shame that 50
years on from the spirit of idealism and commitment to a better world
which framed the adoption of the UDHR, poverty affects hundreds of
millions while the torture, "disappearances", unfair trials and unlawful
killings continue."

"While many leaders will mark today's historic occasion by reiterating
their commitment to protecting human rights, Amnesty International will
hold up a mirror to highlight just how far reality is from the world
envisaged in the UDHR."

"Behind the rhetoric is the reality. Amnesty International's 1998 Annual
Report documents the facts. At least 1.3 billion people live on less
than $1 a day, 117 governments torture their citizens; at least 55
governments unlawfully kill their citizens; at least 87 governments jail
prisoners of conscience; at least 31 governments make their citizens
"disappear"; and at least 40 governments execute their citizens."

Mr San�'s comments were made during the first ever world summit of human
rights defenders, organized to mark the anniversary and taking place in
the Palais de Chaillot in Paris, the location of the UDHR's adoption by
the United Nations in 1948.

More than 300 grass-roots activists from over 100 countries have
gathered in Paris to highlight their struggle and call on governments to
help human rights defenders under attack. They are joined by well-known
defenders such as Nobel laureates Rigoberta Mench� and Jos� Ramos Horta,
His Holiness the Dalai Lama; Chinese dissident Wei Jingsheng; US civil
rights campaigner Angela Davis; and Algerian Newspaper Editor Salima
Ghazali.

Later today, in a live satellite link-up with New York where the UN
General Assembly is also celebrating the anniversary, the President of
the summit will deliver a "Paris Declaration" on human rights defenders,
which will be followed by a response from UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan.

"I think all those who contributed to the conception of the UDHR in 1948
would be horrified to listen to the personal testimonies from these
brave individuals gathered here who have been persecuted by their
governments merely for peacefully trying to defend the rights set out in
that historic document," Mr San� said.

"I hope that many of those government representatives in New York will
be chastened by the voices of ordinary people around the world who have
shown extraordinary courage by taking it upon themselves to defend the
rights of others."

Although Amnesty International's annual report presents a bleak look at
the state of human rights 50 years on, Mr San� said that in some areas
there had been improvement, but in many others governments failed to
implement the majority of standards they themselves had set up since the
UDHR's adoption.

In particular he focussed on the issue of impunity with the recent
arrest of General Pinochet and the adoption in Rome this year of the
statute for a permanent international criminal court. Although flawed,
it presents the best chance we have of giving teeth to the UDHR and
ensuring that future perpetrators of crimes against humanity are
discouraged from committing human rights violations or are brought to
justice when they do, Mr San� argued.

"Setting up an international criminal court is one of the greatest steps
forward in human rights protection taken by the international
community," Mr San� said. "A fitting way to mark the UDHR's anniversary
would be for all governments to immediately ratify the statute without
conditions so that the court can begin to bring about an end to the
impunity that has marked the last fifty years."

Amnesty International also welcomed the reforms undertaken by UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan to integrate human rights concerns into all
the key areas of the UN's work, and called on governments to fully
support these moves.

"The UDHR has been called 'the world's best kept secret' and 'little
more than a paper promise' Mr San� said. For the last 37 years, Amnesty
International, together with tens of thousands of human rights defenders
and non-governmental organizations, has been working to share that
secret."

"When governments adopted the UDHR they promised to disseminate it
throughout society. Today, on the fiftieth anniversary, we promise to
redouble our efforts to make sure that for the next 50 years, the UDHR
is no longer a secret, and challenge governments to finally live up to
the promise they made fifty years ago."

Today's commemoration in Paris will conclude with musicians from around
the world playing the biggest human rights concert since the Human
Rights Now Tour ten years ago. Radiohead, Alanis Morissette, Asian Dub
Foundation, Peter Gabriel, Tracy Chapman, Youssou N'Dour, Kassav',
Axelle Red, Shania Twain, Orlando Poleo, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant
will perform in front of a packed Bercy Stadium.
ENDS.../
Amnesty International, International Secretariat, 1 Easton Street,
WC1X 8DJ, London, United Kingdom

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