document stringlengths 20 49 | text_en stringlengths 147 11k | label stringclasses 2
values |
|---|---|---|
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recalling also the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, in which it is reaffirmed that all human rights, including the right to development, are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated, the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development and the Beijing Declarati... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recalling further the commitment of States to achieve gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls in the context of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Addis Ababa Programme of Action of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that female genital mutilation constitutes a serious violation of human rights and a form of extreme violence against women and girls, intrinsically linked to deep-rooted harmful stereotypes and social norms, harmful perceptions and customs that undermine the recognition, enjoyment and exercise of their hum... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing also that female genital mutilation poses a serious threat to physical integrity, mental, sexual and reproductive health, and maternal health, as well as to the health of newborns, children and adolescents, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing further that female genital mutilation is a harmful practice, which poses a serious threat to the right of women and girls to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, including physical, mental, sexual and reproductive health, and to the health of the mother, newborn, ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that all harmful practices, such as female genital mutilation, when perpetrated on girls have a particularly harmful effect on their health and growth, and recalling in this regard the need to guarantee all human rights and fundamental freedoms of the girl child and to protect them from all forms of violenc... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing also that discriminatory and stereotyped attitudes and behaviours have a direct impact on the status and treatment of women and girls, and that such stereotypes impede the establishment of legislative and normative frameworks that promote gender equality and prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex, as w... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that decades of efforts to eliminate female genital mutilation are being undermined by cross-border practices, which occur when girls or women from a country that prohibits female genital mutilation are taken across national borders in neighbouring countries that have not prohibited this harmful practice or... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Deeply concerned that, despite intensified efforts at the national, regional and international levels, the harmful practice of female genital mutilation persists throughout a globalized and more interconnected world, where humanitarian situations, armed conflicts, pandemics and other crises exacerbate human rights viol... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that, as a result of population movements across national borders and among nations, the prevention and elimination of female genital mutilation should not only be a national priority in development, human rights and public health, but also increasingly a global priority requiring a comprehensive and multis... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that, in order to prevent and combat female genital mutilation, including cross-border and transnational female genital mutilation, it is important to establish mechanisms for cooperation and coordination at the national, local and regional levels, with the joint participation of public entities in all sect... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recalling the annual celebration on 6 February of the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation, aimed at strengthening awareness-raising campaigns and taking concrete measures against female genital mutilation, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern at the lack of effective international, regional and bilateral cooperation to prosecute perpetrators and to provide victims and survivors of female genital mutilation with access to redress and redress, health care and services, including sexual and reproductive health, mental health and psychos... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that the criminalization of female genital mutilation alone is insufficient if it is not accompanied by comprehensive and multisectoral complementary measures and support programmes, including health, gender equality and education, involving the community at large, and could contribute to discrimination aga... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Recognizing that in order to establish responsibilities and provide reparation to victims of cross-border and transnational female genital mutilation, it is important not only to provide for protection measures and legal remedies, but also to adopt a wide range of other measures in the design, implementation and monito... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-16-fr-parsed | Noting with concern that, in the absence of national and regional monitoring and data collection mechanisms, robust monitoring and evaluation frameworks to monitor progress, standardized data collection guidelines and regional cooperation agreements to share and manage information, and owing to the weakness of national... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Reaffirming the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recalling that gender equality and the condemnation of discrimination and violence against women and girls are enshrined in the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development, the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the outco... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recalling also all relevant resolutions and agreed conclusions adopted by the General Assembly and the Security Council, in particular Council resolution 1325 (2000) on women and peace and security of 31 October 2000, adopted by the Commission on the Status of Women and other United Nations bodies and bodies that addre... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recalling further that gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls are an integral objective of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and are systematically integrated into all the goals and targets of the Programme, and recalling the adoption of the Addis Ababa Programme of Action of the Third Int... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Emphasizing that international human rights law prohibits discrimination, inter alia, on the basis of gender, and that national laws, policies and practices should be consistent with the international obligations of States, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Taking note of the recommendations contained in the report of the Advisory Committee on the current levels of representation of women in human rights bodies and mechanisms and the measures to be taken to ensure gender balance, submitted to the General Assembly at its forty-seventh session, as requested by the Assembly ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern at the hostile reactions to the progress made by States, international and regional organizations and civil society, including women's organizations and community-based organizations, feminist groups, indigenous women's and women's organizations of African descent, women and girls human rights d... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that women and girls are subject throughout their lives to multiple, cross-cutting and systemic forms of discrimination, including gender, age, race, ethnic origin, indigenous peoples, religion or belief, physical and mental health, disability, civil status, socio-economic environment and migration status, ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that States should take into account cross-cutting and systemic discrimination in law and practice, as appropriate, and implement policies and programmes to address its aggravated impact on women and girls, and recognizing the importance of eliminating all forms of discrimination in the private and public s... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Reaffirming that the full enjoyment of all human rights by all women and girls includes sexual and reproductive health and the exercise of reproductive rights without coercion, discrimination or violence, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that sexual and reproductive health information, education and services include, inter alia, accessible and inclusive family planning services, modern, safe and effective contraceptive methods, access to emergency contraception, adolescent pregnancy prevention programmes and prevention of unwanted pregnanci... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern that the crisis of VOCID-19 has exacerbated the pre-existing forms of inequality and systemic discrimination faced by women and girls, including patriarchy, misogyny, racism, stigmatization, xenophobia, validism and socio-economic inequalities, and has increased the number of gender-based sexual... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Reaffirming the need to intensify efforts to increase the participation and leadership of women and girls with disabilities in society by eliminating all obstacles that prevent or limit the full and equal participation of women and girls with disabilities, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Expressing particular concern about systemic and structural discrimination, violence and harassment faced by women and girls activists, including gender-based and sexual violence and defamation and denigration campaigns, both online and offline, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that women and girls are among the most affected by violence and discrimination in the context of participation in public affairs, including, inter alia, the persistence of gender, disability and age stereotypes and negative social and cultural norms, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Deeply concerned that girls and young women still do not have the same opportunities as boys and young men to participate in and learn about the social, economic and political functioning of society, and that they are often deterred, directly or indirectly, from participating in decision-making processes and in subsequ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that stereotypes and negative cultural and social norms that assign inferior status to girls and young women perpetuate discrimination against them in the public and private spheres, increase the likelihood of their being confined to the home, assume binding responsibilities for domestic work and personal s... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Noting with deep concern that girls and young women activists face particular challenges as a result of widespread prejudice regarding their participation in public life and their rights to freedom of expression, freedom of association and freedom of peaceful assembly, violence and harassment, lack of consideration of ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that girls and young women are interested in a wide and varied range of areas in which they act, such as gender equality, the elimination of all forms of gender-based violence and harmful practices, children's rights, climate justice, social and economic inequalities, inclusive development, racial discrimin... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Emphasizing the need to respect and protect the human rights and autonomy of all girls and young women and to actively promote and support their action, as well as to ensure their protection from threats, intimidation, reprisals, violence and harassment, online and offline, and to take concrete measures to remove struc... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recognizing that the right to education, including access to inclusive and quality education, has transformative power and is a right to multiplier effects that contributes to empowering all women and girls to exercise their human rights, including the right to participate in the conduct of public affairs, as well as i... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-18-fr-parsed | Recalling that discrimination against women and girls violates the principle of equality and that States should take effective measures to promote substantive equality and non-discrimination, including by taking into account and redressing pre-existing gender inequalities, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Recalling all its relevant resolutions and those of the Commission on Human Rights, the General Assembly and the Security Council, as well as the relevant resolutions and agreed conclusions of the Commission on the Status of Women, in which, inter alia, it is affirmed that all forms of violence against women and girls ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Recalling also that gender equality has been taken into account in the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the outcome documents of their review conferences, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern at the continuing violence in various parts of the Syrian Arab Republic and its devastating consequences for civilians, including in the context of the ongoing humanitarian crisis, serious violations of and violations of international human rights law and violations of international humanitarian... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Recalling the statements of the Secretary-General and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights that crimes against humanity and war crimes are likely to have been committed in the Syrian Arab Republic, as well as the conclusions of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry into the Syrian Arab Re... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Noting with deep concern the findings of the Commission of Inquiry, including in its most recent report, 1 that sexual violence and gender-based violence against women, girls, men and boys have been prevalent in the Syrian Arab Republic since 2011 and are not sufficiently reported and continue to be perpetrated, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Noting also with deep concern the findings of the reports of the Commission of Inquiry entitled "I lost my dignity: sexual and gender-based violence in the Syrian Arab Republic" of 2018 and "Out of light, out of mind: Deaths in detention in the Syrian Arab Republic" of 2016, in which it is stated, inter alia, that seri... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Recognizing that all women and girls have been disproportionately affected by the crisis and continue to be among the most affected, for many reasons, including the fact that many women have become the principal or sole breadwinner, a situation that can be exacerbated by the forced disappearance of family members, as t... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Noting with regret the findings of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights that more than one in 13 people who lost their lives as a result of the conflict was a woman, and nearly one in 13 children, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern that internally displaced Syrian women and children are disproportionately affected by the loss of livelihoods, including unequal access to assistance, education, adequate hygiene, including menstrual hygiene, and health services, and are subjected to sexual and gender-based violence such as exp... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Noting with deep concern the findings of the Commission of Inquiry that children have been subjected to sexual and gender-based violence since the early days of the Syrian conflict, aware of the profound impact of the conflict on children, and taking note in this regard of the report of the Commission of Inquiry of 202... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Noting with deep regret that women, girls, men and boys who are victims of sexual and gender-based violence often do not have access to immediate health care, in particular in detention centres where reported cases of sexual violence continue to occur, and that the authorities often refuse to provide medical care to pe... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Noting with concern the situation of internally displaced persons in camps, the majority of whom are women and children, who are particularly vulnerable to sexual and gender-based violence, including murder, physical, verbal and sexual assault, neglect, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Taking note of the comments of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on the impact of frequent cases of enforced disappearance and of persons reported missing or arbitrarily detained on Syrian women, 4 which must bear, inter alia, the often terrifying and demoralizing test of the search for their loved ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Recognizing the importance of establishing genuine and constructive links with victims in order to promote their full and equal participation and to take into account their views, including those of women and children who have survived, as well as their demands for truth and justice, in the context of the international... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern that victims of sexual and gender-based violence in the Syrian Arab Republic fear denouncing such acts because of the stigma attached to such violence and the threat of reprisals, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-19-fr-parsed | Recognizing the crucial importance of women's full, equal and effective participation in peace efforts in order to ensure lasting peace and to contribute to the prevention and settlement of disputes and to the promotion of peace, as emphasized by the Security Council in its resolution 1325 (2000) of 31 October 2000 on ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-20-fr-parsed | Recalling all resolutions adopted by the Commission on Human Rights, the General Assembly and the General Assembly on the situation of human rights in Belarus, including resolutions 47/19 of 13 July 2021 and 49/26 of 1 April 2022, and recalling also the statements made by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Reaffirming also the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, and recalling relevant international human rights instruments, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, as well... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Reaffirming that, in accordance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, States Members of the United Nations have undertaken to promote, in cooperation with the Organization, universal respect for and observance of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinction of any kind, including race, co... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling its decision 17/120 of 17 June 2011, its resolutions 19/35 of 23 March 2012, 22/10 of 21 March 2013, 25/38 of 28 March 2014, 31/37 of 24 March 2016, 38/11 of 6 July 2018 and 44/20 of 17 July 2020 on the promotion and protection of human rights in the context of peaceful demonstrations and other relevant resol... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling also its resolution 43/1 of 19 June 2020 on the promotion and protection of the human rights and fundamental freedoms of Africans and people of African descent against police brutality and other human rights violations, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing that, in accordance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of association... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing also that such restrictions must be based on the right and must be necessary and proportionate to the achievement of a legitimate purpose, in accordance with the obligations of the State under the applicable international human rights instruments and must, if imposed, be subject to prompt, independent and i... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Reaffirming that emergency measures taken by Governments must be necessary, proportionate to the risk assessed and applied in a non-discriminatory manner, have a specific objective and duration and be consistent with the obligations of the State under applicable international human rights law, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling that States have the primary responsibility to promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms, including in the context of gatherings such as peaceful demonstrations, and to ensure that national laws, policies and practices, as the national framework for the exercise of the rights to freedom of pea... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Noting that the proper management of a gathering requires respect for human rights before, during and after rallies and may have an influence on the rallies, and that it aims to contribute to the peaceful conduct of such demonstrations and to prevent loss of life and injury among those who participate in and monitor th... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing also that participation in peaceful demonstrations can be an important form of exercising the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression, freedom of association and participation in the conduct of public affairs, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing that peaceful demonstrations can contribute positively to the development, strengthening and effectiveness of democratic systems and democratic processes, including elections and referendums, as well as the rule of law, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing also that peaceful demonstrations have always played a constructive social and political role in building more just, equal and responsible societies, and that they can continue to contribute positively to human development and the full enjoyment of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing further that peaceful demonstrations should be seen as spaces where marginalized persons, communities and groups can safely mobilize to express their views and opinions and to assert their rights, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling that the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of association include the organization, observation, monitoring and recording of meetings, the dissemination of information about and participation in meetings, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Deeply concerned about extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, enforced disappearances, torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, violence, including sexual and gender-based violence, against persons exercising their right to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and f... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Expressing deep concern at the restrictions imposed on journalists and other media professionals, monitors, lawyers, other observers, such as human rights defenders, and medical personnel, and the fact that they are targeted as they carry out their legitimate activities during demonstrations, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing that women, children, indigenous peoples, migrants, persons of African descent, persons belonging to minorities, persons with disabilities and other persons belonging to groups experiencing discrimination and marginalization are particularly vulnerable to the illegal use of force by the police when particip... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Reaffirming that the full and effective participation of women and girls in public life is essential for the achievement of equality, sustainable development, peace and democracy, and that effective public policies, campaigns and educational programmes are necessary to combat discriminatory social norms, harmful attitu... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Deeply concerned about the lack of information, misinformation, misuse of new technologies and undue restrictions on access to or dissemination of information, including the partial or total shutdown of the Internet at key political moments, which has an impact on the ability to organize and hold gatherings, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Noting that access to and use of communications technologies in a safe and private manner, in accordance with international human rights law, is important for the organization and holding of gatherings, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Noting also that, while physical assembly is generally understood to mean assembly of persons, the protections guaranteed by international human rights law, including the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of association, also apply to similar online interactions, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Expressing its concern that individuals and groups in all regions of the world are criminalized and prosecuted, including in trials that do not respect due process or trial before military courts, solely for organizing or participating in peaceful demonstrations, observing, monitoring or recording demonstrations, or fo... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Expressing its concern also at the arbitrary and illegal surveillance of both physical and online areas of persons participating in peaceful demonstrations, including through closed-circuit television cameras and aerial surveillance vehicles, as well as new and emerging digital tracing tools, such as biometric technolo... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Emphasizing the importance of technical means to ensure and preserve the confidentiality of digital communications, including means of encryption, pseudonymization and online anonymization, in ensuring the enjoyment of human rights, in particular the right to privacy, the right to freedom of expression and the right to... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Stressing that peaceful demonstrations and the persons who organize and participate in them should not be considered a threat, and therefore calling upon all States to engage in an open, inclusive and constructive dialogue in addressing peaceful demonstrations and their causes, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling that isolated acts of violence committed by some during demonstrations do not deprive peaceful participants of their rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of association, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recognizing that national human rights institutions and representatives of civil society, including non-governmental organizations, can make a useful contribution to facilitating an ongoing dialogue between organizers, participants in peaceful demonstrations and relevant authorities, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Emphasizing the need to ensure that responsibilities are fully established for human rights violations or abuses committed in the context of demonstrations, including by investigating such violations and abuses and by ensuring that victims have access to an effective remedy and reparations, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling the Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials and the Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials, as well as the Minnesota Protocol on Investigation of Homicides Potentially Resulting from Illegal Acts, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling also the United Nations human rights-based guidelines on the use of lethal weapons in law enforcement issued by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights as a complement to the Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials, and calling upon all States... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Recalling the importance of the proper training, equipping, supervision and accountability of public and private law enforcement officials assigned to the management of gatherings, and the need to refrain, to the extent possible, from assigning military personnel to such functions or using military equipment and techni... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-21-fr-parsed | Reaffirming that, in situations of armed conflict, including military occupation, international human rights law and international humanitarian law are complementary and mutually reinforcing, and that States must comply with their obligations under international humanitarian law during peaceful demonstrations, includin... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Reaffirming the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and recalling the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women,... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Recalling the relevant resolutions adopted by the General Assembly and the General Assembly, the most recent of which were Assembly resolution 76/180 of 16 December 2021 and Assembly resolutions 29/21 of 3 July 2015, 34/22 of 24 March 2017, 37/32 of 23 March 2018, 39/2 of 27 September 2018, 40/29 of 22 March 2019, 42/3... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Welcoming the reports of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on the root causes of human rights violations and abuses against Rohingya and other minorities in Myanmar submitted to the General Assembly at its forty-third session,1 and on the implementation of the recommendations of the independent fact... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Taking note of the work and reports of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, deeply regretting Myanmar's continued failure to cooperate with the mandate holder and its refusal to allow Myanmar to enter the country since December 2017, and urging Myanmar to cooperate fully with the Special ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Welcoming the work of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Myanmar, and welcoming in this regard the appointment of the new Special Envoy, and encouraging her in her efforts to consult with and engage in an inclusive dialogue with all stakeholders, including civil society, and the affected populations, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Noting with appreciation also the ongoing work and reports of the Independent Inquiry Mechanism for Myanmar established by the Human Rights Council in its resolution 39/2 to collect, consolidate, preserve and analyse evidence of the commission of the most serious international crimes and violations of international law... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Recalling the considerable work done by the independent international fact-finding mission on Myanmar and its reports, including its final report 4 and its reports on the economic interests of the Myanmar army and on sexual and gender-based violence in Myanmar and the special consequences of the ethnic conflicts in Mya... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Noting with concern that recent events resulting from the declaration of a state of emergency by the Myanmar army make it particularly difficult for all forcibly displaced persons, including Rohingya Muslims, and internally displaced persons, including those who have been displaced since 1 February 2021, to return volu... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Expressing concern also at the restrictions imposed on civil society, journalists, media professionals and humanitarian workers, which may further exacerbate the suffering of Rohingya Muslims and other ethnic minorities in Myanmar, | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Expressing its unequivocal support for the people of Myanmar and their democratic aspirations and for the democratic transition of the country, and affirming unequivocally the need to preserve democratic institutions and processes, refrain from violence and fully respect human rights, fundamental freedoms and the rule ... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Reaffirming the urgent need to ensure that all those responsible for violations of international law, including international human rights law, international humanitarian law and international criminal law, and violations thereof, committed throughout Myanmar, are held accountable through credible and independent natio... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Recognizing the complementary and synergistic efforts of various United Nations mandate-holders and mechanisms, including international justice and accountability mechanisms dealing with the situation in Myanmar, with a view to improving the humanitarian and human rights situation in the country, and noting with concer... | preambular |
A-HRC-RES-50-3-fr-parsed | Noting also that the International Criminal Court authorized its Prosecutor to investigate alleged crimes within its jurisdiction in the context of the investigation into the situation in the People's Republic of Bangladesh/Republic of the Union of Myanmar, | preambular |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.