Distinguished Delegates and Representatives of
Member States of the Human Rights Council,
The enforced disappearance of people is one of the most heinous
human rights violations and constitutes a crime under international
law. The victim, deprived of all of his or her rights and placed
thereby outside the protection of the law, is relegated to a situation
of total vulnerability at the hands of the perpetrators of the crime.
Enforced disappearance constitutes a grave offence to human dignity.
Its practice inflicts severe suffering on the relatives and friends
of the disappeared person. Eternal waiting and total uncertainty
about his or her return, fate and whereabouts constantly torture
their loved ones. The abduction of children of parents subjected
to enforced disappearance, or born during the captivity of their
mothers is most shameful, and constitutes a flagrant denial of human
dignity. The practice of enforced disappearance violates the basic
principles of the rule of law and the very concept of humanity itself.
Since 1981, associations of relatives of disappeared persons, non-governmental
organizations, governments and international organizations have
undertaken continuing and indefatigable efforts for the adoption
by the United Nations of an international treaty against enforced
disappearances in order to tackle this heinous and inhuman affliction,.
The first successful step forward was the adoption in 1992 of the
United Nations Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance. In September 2005, an Open-Ended Working
Group, mandated by the Commission on Human Rights to draft an international
legally binding instrument against disappearances, successfully
concluded its negotiations and approved, by consensus, the draft
of the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons
from Enforced Disappearances. This project will now be under consideration
by the United Nations Human Rights Council.
This Convention fills an immense gap in the international legal
framework which is the lack of an international treaty to prevent
and suppress this international crime and most serious violation
of human rights. The Convention will not only become an effective
legal tool of the international community in its struggle against
enforced disappearances, but also represents a basically political
message that this odious practice will no longer be tolerated and
must be suppressed.
We therefore call on all Member States of the Human Rights Council
to give the highest priority to the approval of the International
Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance
during the first session of the Human Rights Council in June 2006
so that it can be forwarded to the General Assembly for final adoption.
The Human Rights Council will, thereby, not only greatly contribute
to the struggle against enforced disappearances, but also enhance
its own mandate and show its firm determination to promote and protect
human rights.
Families of Victims of Involuntary Disappearance (FIND), Philippines,
Nilda L. Sevilla, Co-Chairperson;
Coalition Against Involuntary Disappearance (CAID), Philippines,
Raquel Santos, FIND-Lead Convenor;
Association of the Children of the Disappeared (SAD-FIND), Philippines,
Celia Sevilla, Coordinator;
Civil Initiative «We Remember», Belarus, Irina Krasovskaya, president;
and the others
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