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1. FIAPFranciscans International Asia Pacific
2. Background
3. Social Justice Issues Disabled people exploited in boarding houses
People with HIV/AIDES and
Homosexual teenagers struggling to be accepted
Short term imprisonment of women
Detained Asylum seekers
Asylum seekers not permitted to work
5. 2005 2006
6. Unbalanced
7. Lessons Vulnerable people intelligent, highly skilled risk-takers
Immigration process flawed, cruel
Responsible citizens ashamed
Powerless
8. Balance
9. From Local to Global
11. Formal Structure
12. Programs for grassroots Franciscans
13. Systemic Change
14. The Right to Development Physical survival
Intellectual, Economic, and
Political development
15. Uncontrolled use of natural resources:
Forests
Land
Water
Fisheries The Environment
16. Human Rights Thematic Issues:
UN Commission on Human Rights
Migration in Europe
Religious Freedom
Human trafficking
Violence against Women
AIDES
Extreme poverty
UN Norms on transnational businesses
Optional Protocol to ICESCR
17. Facilitate peaceful
solutions to
Violence
Conflict
War Peacemaking
18. F I and F I A P
19. Submissions to UN 2006
20. Recommendations:
Uphold and respect international lawre civilians
Ensure establishment of a sovereign Iraqi government
Programs bring about material, economic and psychological reconstruction
Rebuild infrastructure health and education and legal institutions
Bilateral relationships re aid and cooperation
Commission on Human Rights monitoring Human Rights in Occupied Iraq
21. West Papua Issues:
1.Indonesia unprepared to dialogue with Papuans
2.Implementation of Special Autonomy Law unresolved.
3.Political interests are destroying social cohesion
4.Heavy Indonesian military presence
5.Cycle of impunity prevents protection and promotion of human rights
6. Judicial system protects perpetrators
7. Papuans feel unprotected
8. Timber illegally appropriated, illegal fishing
9. HIV and AIDS second highest in Indonesia; trafficking of persons, and alcohol abuse unchecked
10.Migrants dominate job market
11.Benefits from mining, logging and fishing not invested in public service
22. Peace Initiatives to address conflict and build peace
Recommend UN Commission on Human Rights to
Protect the life of the Indigenous Papuans and treat as equal citizens
Indonesia fulfil international obligations
Indonesia grant full access to Human Rights Commissioners
Convention on Elimination of Racial Discrimination
Mainstream Human rights education
Indonesians fully participat in the Papua:Land of Peace program
23. Franciscans International The UN Instruments are the
sacred scriptures for global governance
understood by every race and
every faith.
Written specifically to protect the vulnerable in society and
the environment.
24. FIAP
25. International human rights: the problems and the possibilities of working in Asia Pacific Chris Sidoti Executive Director, International Service for Human Rights in Geneva THE ASIA PACIFIC REGION
One third of the worlds surface area
but a large part of it is ocean, mountains and desert
Two thirds of the worlds people
with nations ranging in size
from China and India, each with over 1 billion people
to Nauru, Tuvalu and Kiribati, each with only a few thousand people
26. THE ASIA PACIFIC REGION Not one region but six!!
The Pacific
South East Asia
North east Asia
South Asia
West Asia
Central Asia
and in each there is a reflection of the diversity of the Asia Pacific as a whole
27. SOME COMMON OPPORTUNITIES The peoples of the Asia Pacific
their drive and energy and
sheer determination
cultures of ambition and motivation
the hunger for change
the kids!!
The collapse of authoritarian regimes
but the difficult management of transition
Natural resources, including good agricultural lands and seas
but the threats of environment disaster
Wealth!! Asia is not Africa
Diversity itself
28. WHAT CAN UNITE THE ASIA PACIFIC? Contribution of the Christian churches as institutions that are across the region
Within the diversity of Asia it is impossible to find values that are
common to all Asia and
exclusive of everyone else
Human rights as the unifying vision
29. THE UNIVERSALITY OF HUMAN RIGHTS The language of rights has its origin in time and place but it is not the exclusive product of any one religious, cultural or political tradition
In fact Catholic Christianity came very late to the human rights cause, affirmed only in the early 1960s by John XXIII and then by the Vatican Council
The religious texts of all major religions are silent on rights but they all resonate with the concepts we now call human rights
Common values of compassion, human dignity and respect
Justice (righteousness) as the basis of vertical and horizontal relationships
30. Human Rights Training in the regionCross cultural interaction
31. Greater awareness of Human Rights Issues from a Franciscan Perspective
32. Right Relationships & Resources
33. Greater awareness of Human Rights Issues in the Asia Pacific region
34. A specific spiritual approach to human rights and political realities
35. Resources WE can offer FI Asia Pacific Intellectual: encourage students, ex-students and parishioners to attend Human Rights workshops in Bangkok
Encourage members of other congregations and parishes to participate in the workshops.
Offer personnel: to assist with courses
Spiritual: keep the project in our community prayer
Host Franciscan youth for World Youth Day
3. Economic: contribute seed funding until the project is self sustaining
36. Economically
it is do-able, if each
congregation in each country contributed
37. 3. Human Rights training and advocacy would have a Franciscan basis 4. FI Asia Pacific would link into FI Internationals global vision
38. Franciscans International Asia Pacific