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The real importance of the Human Rights Commission which
was created by the Economic and Social Council lies in the
fact that throughout the world there are many people who do
not enjoy the basic rights which have come to be accepted
in many other parts of the world as inherent rights of all
individuals, without which no one can live in dignity and
freedom.
At the first meeting of the Economic and Social Council
in London, early in 1946, a Nuclear Commission was named to
recommend a permanent setup for the full Commission of Human
Rights, and to consider the work which it should first undertake.
These first members of the Nuclear Commission were not chosen
as representatives of governments, but as individuals. Naturally,
however, each government was asked to concur in the nomination
from that country. There were nine members nominated, but
two of them were not able to come; and one or two nations
insisted on nominating their own representatives. I was one
of the members of the original Nuclear Commission, and when
we met at Hunter College, I was elected chairman. The other
members were: Mr. Fernanda de Husse, Belgium; Mr. K. C. Neogi,
India; Professor René Cassin, France; Dr. C. L. Haai,
China; Mr. Dusan Brkish, Jugoslavia; Mr. Borisov, U.S.S.R.
The representative from the U.S.S.R. was at first a young
secretary from the Soviet Embassy. The other members of the
Nuclear Commission did not realize that he was not the regular
representative and was not empowered to vote. It was not until
three days before the end of the meeting that the regular
member, Mr. Borisov, arrived; and then we discovered that
the representative of the U.S.S.R. who had been attending
the meetings actually had no right to vote, and such votes
had to be removed from the record. The Commission was a little
disturbed because a number of concessions had been made in
order to obtain unanimity. Also, this change made it impossible
for any decision to be unanimous, since the Soviet representative
had been told that he could not commit his government by a
vote on any subject and therefore registered no vote on the
first recommendations for the Commission's organization and
program of work.
The Commission made a number of recommendations. For instance,
we agreed that persons should be chosen as individuals and
not merely as representatives of governments. We agreed that
there should be 18 members of the full Commission--an example
of a minor point on which we had made concessions to the representative
of the U.S.S.R., because originally the various members of
the group had differed as to what the proper size of the Commission
should be. I had been told that it made very little difference
to the United States whether the Commission numbered 12 or
25, but it was felt the number should not be less than 12
because unavoidable absences might cut it down to too small
a group; and it was felt also that the number should not be
more than 25, for fear a large group might make our work very
difficult to accomplish.
When I found out how many varieties of opinion there were,
I made the suggestion as chairman that we might make the number
21, since we were apt to discuss some rather controversial
subjects, and if there was a tie the chairman could cast the
deciding vote. Most of the members agreed with this until
we came to the representative of the U.S.S.R. He insisted
that we should be 18, because our parent body, the Economic
and Social Council, was made up of 18 members. As we did not
feel that the size of the Commission was vitally important,
and as he could not be induced to change, we agreed to recommend
that the Commission consist of 18 members.
Among a number of other recommendations in our report we
suggested that the first work to be undertaken was the writing
of a Bill of Human Rights. Many of us thought that lack of
standards for human rights the world over was one of the greatest
causes of friction among the nations, and that recognition
of human rights might become one of the cornerstones of which
peace could eventually be based.
At its next meeting, the Economic and Social Council received
our report, which I presented, and it was then studied in
detail and a number of changes were made. The members of the
Commission were made government representatives, chosen by
their governments. The 18 governments to be represented on
the Commission were chosen by the Economic and Social Council.
The United States was given a four-year appointment and my
government nominated me as a member. At present the following
are represented on the commission: Australia, Belgium, Byelorussia,
China, Chile, Egypt, France, India, Lebanon, Panama, the Philippines,
Ukraine, the U.S.S.R., Jugoslavia, Uruguay, the United Kingdom
and the United States.
The first session of the full Commission was called in January
1947. The officers chosen at that time, in addition to myself
as permanent chairman, were Dr. Chang of China as vice-chairman
and Dr. Charles Malik of Lebanon as rapporteur. In that first
meeting we requested that the Division of Human Rights in
the Secretariat get out a yearbook on human rights, and receive
all petitions and acknowledge them. Since we were not a court,
we could do nothing actually to solve the problems that the
petitions presented, but we could tell the petitioners that
once the Bill of Human Rights was written, they might find
that their particular problems came under one of its provisions.
We considered some of the main points which should go into
the drafting of the Bill of Human Rights, and we named a drafting
committee which should present the first draft to the next
meeting of the full Commission. This work was entrusted to
the officers of the Commission, all of whom were available
in or near Lake Success, and to Dr. John Humphrey, as head
of the Division of Human Rights in the Secretariat. But when
the Economic and Social Council received the report of this
procedure considerable opposition to the appointment of so
small a committee was expressed. As it had been understood
in our meeting that the chairman of the committee was to call
upon other members of the Commission for advice and assistance,
I at once urged that the drafting committee be increased to
eight members. This was done.
The drafting committee then met in June 1947. The delegate
from the U.S.S.R., Mr. Koretsky, and the delegate from Byelorussia,
neither of whom was authorized to vote on an unfinished document
and both of whom lacked instructions from their governments,
participated very little in the general discussion of the
drafting committee, though they did agree to the principles
that all men are equal and that men and women should have
equal rights. The second meeting of the full Commission was
called in Geneva, Switzerland, because some members felt strongly
that the Human Rights Commission should hold a session in
Europe. We were scheduled to meet on December 1, 1947, but
as many of the members were delayed in arriving we actually
met on December 2.
We mapped out our work very carefully. The position of the
United States had been that it would be impossible in these
initial meetings to do more than write a Declaration. If the
Declaration were accepted by the General Assembly the next
autumn, it would carry moral weight, but it would not carry
any legal weight. Many of the smaller nations were strongly
of the opinion that the oppressed peoples of the world and
the minority groups would feel that they had been cruelly
deceived if we did not write a Convention which would be presented
for ratification, nation by nation, and which when accepted
would be incorporated into law in the same way that treaties
among nations are accepted and implemented. The Government
of the United States had never, of course, been opposed to
writing a Convention; it simply felt that the attempt would
not be practical in these early stages. When it was found
that feeling ran high on this subject, we immediately cooperated.
The Commission divided itself into three groups. The group
to work on the Declaration consisted of the representatives
of Byelorussia, France, Panama, the Philippines, the U.S.S.R.
and the United States. The group to work on the Convention
was made up of the representatives of Chile, China, Egypt,
Lebanon, the United Kingdom and Jugoslavia. The third group,
to work on methods of implementation, which would later, of
course, be included in the Convention, consisted of the representatives
of Australia, India, Iran, Ukraine and Uruguay.
At the first meeting of the Commission, the representative
from Australia made the suggestion that a Court of Human Rights
be created. There had been a good deal of discussion of this
idea in previous meetings. The general feeling was, however,
that this action could not be taken under the Charter as it
now stands and would raise the problem of revision of the
Charter.
At the start, the United Kingdom had brought to the drafting
committee a Declaration and a Convention which included suggestions
for implementation. The U.S.S.R., while still not committing
itself to any vote, as the Soviet Government still insisted
that until a finished document was prepared they could not
vote on it, nevertheless was willing to participate in the
discussions which concerned the writing of a Declaration.
Their representative took an active part, particularly in
the discussion and formulation of the social and economic
rights of the individual which are considered in some detail
in the Declaration.
This was a hard-working committee, and I was extremely gratified
both at the willingness of the members to put in long hours
and at the general spirit of cooperation. In spite of the
fact that a good many of the members must frequently have
been very weary, there was always an atmosphere of good feeling
and consideration for others, even when questions arose which
called forth strong differences of opinion
We finished our work at 11:30 p.m. on the night of December
17, and I think the documents which have now gone to all of
the member governments in the United Nations are very creditable.
A Declaration and a Convention were written. The group working
on implementation made suggestions which, of course, must
be more carefully considered before they are fully incorporated
in the Convention. We now await the comments. These were requested
in early April, so that the Human Rights Division of the Secretariat
could go over them carefully and put them in shape for the
drafting committee which will meet again at Lake Success on
May 3, 1948.
The full Commission will meet at Lake Success on May 17,
to give final consideration to this Bill of Human Rights,
or Pact, as our Government prefers to have it called. The
Economic and Social Council received the report of the documents
written in Geneva, and sent them to the governments in January.
They will now make their comments and suggestions. The final
opportunity for consideration by the Economic and Social Council
will come at its meeting next July, and the pact or charter
which is finally adopted at that meeting will be presented
to the General Assembly in the autumn of 1948.
II
Three Articles in the Declaration seem to me to be of vital
importance. Article 15 provides that everyone has the right
to a nationality; that is, all persons are entitled to the
protection of some government, and those who are without it
shall be protected by the United Nations. Article 16 says
that individual freedom of thought and conscience, to hold
and change beliefs, is an absolute and sacred right. Included
in this Article is a declaration of the right to manifest
these beliefs, in the form of worship, observance, teaching
and practice. Article 21 declares that everyone, without discrimination,
has the right to take an effective part in the government
of his country. This aims to give assurance that governments
of states will bend and change according to the will of the
people as shown in elections, which shall be periodic, free,
fair and by secret ballot.
Some of the other important Articles are broad in scope.
For instance, Article 23 says that everyone has the right
to work, and that the state has a duty to take steps within
its power to ensure its residents an opportunity for useful
work. Article 24 says that everyone has a right to receive
pay commensurate with his ability and skill and may join trade
unions to protect his interests.
Other Articles in the Declaration set forth rights such
as the right to the preservation of health, which would give
the state responsibility for health and safety measures; the
right to social security, which makes it the duty of the state
to provide measures for the security of the individual against
the consequences of unemployment, disability, old age and
other loss of livelihood beyond his control; the right to
education, which should be free and compulsory, and the provision
that higher education should be available to all without distinction
as to race, sex, language, religion, social standing, financial
means or political affiliation; the right to rest and leisure--that
is, a limitation on hours of work and provisions of vacations
with pay; the right to participate in the cultural life of
the community, enjoy its arts and share in the benefits of
science. Another Article asserts that education will be directed
to the full physical, intellectual, moral and spiritual development
of the human personality and to combating hatred against other
nations or racial or religious groups.
If the Declaration is accepted by the Assembly, it will
mean that all the nations accepting it hope that the day will
come when these rights are considered inherent rights belonging
to every human being, but it will not mean that they have
to change their laws immediately to make these rights possible.
On the other hand, as the Convention is ratified by one
nation after another it will require that each ratifying nation
change its laws where necessary, to make possible that every
human being within its borders shall enjoy the rights set
forth. The Convention, of course, covers primarily the civil
liberties which many of the nations of the world have accepted
as inherent rights of human beings, and it reaffirms a clause
in the Charter of the United Nations which says that there
shall be no discrimination among any human beings because
of race, creed or color.
The most important articles of the Convention are subjects
with which every American high school student is familiar.
Article 5 makes it unlawful to deprive a person of life except
as punishment for a crime provided by law. Article 6 outlaws
physical mutilation. Article 7 forbids torture and cruel or
inhuman punishment. Article 8 prohibits slavery and compulsory
labor, with exceptions permitted as to the latter in the case
of military service and emergency service in time of disaster
such as flood or earthquake.
A provision which is new in an international constitutional
sense, though not new in practice to Americans, is Article
11, which guarantees liberty of movement and a free choice
of residence within a state, and a general freedom to every
person in the world to leave any country, including his own.
Article 20 makes all sections of the Convention applicable
without distinction as to race, sex, language, religion, political
or other opinion, property status, or national or social origin;
and Article 21 requires the states to forbid by law the advocacy
of national, racial or religious hostility that constitutes
incitement to violence. In general, every nation ratifying
the Convention will have to make sure that within its jurisdiction
these promised rights become realities, so it is the Convention
which is of the greatest importance to the peoples throughout
the world.
A possible stumbling block to general ratification of the
Convention is the fact that some federal states, like the
United States, operate constitutional systems in which the
primary laws affecting individuals are adopted by the constituent
states and are beyond the constitutional power of the federal
government. The Convention provides, in Article 24, that in
such cases these federal governments shall call to the attention
of their constituent states, with a favorable recommendation,
those Articles considered appropriate for action by them.
One of the questions that will come before the Human Rights
Commission in May is whether all the Articles included in
the Convention shall be submitted to the various nations for
ratification in a single document, to be taken all in one
gulp, so to speak, or shall be divided into separate conventions,
in the thought that this procedure would avoid the rejection
of the entire document because of objection to one or two
articles, as might happen in many cases. Of course, it is
quite evident that in the future there will have to be many
conventions on special subjects, and that the work of the
Human Rights Commission should be directed for years to come
on those subjects as they arise. A convention on the subject
of nationality and stateless persons seems to be knocking
at our doors for consideration almost immediately.
III
As I look back at the work thus far of our Human Rights Commission
I realize that its importance is twofold.
In the first place, we have put into words some inherent
rights. Beyond that, we have found that the conditions of
our contemporary world require the enumeration of certain
protections which the individual must have if he is to acquire
a sense of security and dignity in his own person. The effect
of this is frankly educational. Indeed, I like to think that
the Declaration will help forward very largely the education
of the peoples of the world.
It seems to me most important that the Declaration be accepted
by all member nations, not because they will immediately live
up to all of its provisions, but because they ought to support
the standards toward which the nations must henceforward aim.
Since the objectives have been clearly stated, men of good
will everywhere will strive to attain them with more energy
and, I trust, with better hope of success.
As the Convention is adhered to by one country after another,
it will actually bring into being rights which are tangible
and can be invoked before the law of the ratifying countries.
Everywhere many people will feel more secure. And as the Great
Powers tie themselves down by their ratifications, the smaller
nations which fear that the great may abuse their strength
will acquire a sense of greater assurance.
The work of the Commission has been of outstanding value
in setting before men's eyes the ideals which they must strive
to reach. Men cannot live by bread alone.
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