WUNRN
CALL FOR SIGN-ON - HUMAN RIGHT TO
PEACE - GENDER - UN PROCESS
_________________________________________________________________
Contact details of (main) NGO:
NGO Name: Federación de
Asociaciones de Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos (España)
Name
of main contact person: Carlos Villan Duran and David Fernández Puyana
Phone
number: 0033450421917 (France)
E-mail: aedidh@yahoo.es, david.fernandez-puyana@orange.fr,
Language(s): SPANISH AND ENGLISH
HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL
15º session
13 September to 1 October 2010
Agenda item 3 of the provisional programme
Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political,
economic, social and cultural, including the right to development
Report of the independent expert on human rights and international
solidarity
Joint written statement submitted by (PROVISIONAL LIST) the International
Alliance of Women (IAW), the Commission of the Churches on International
Affairs of the World Council of Churches (CCIA/WCC), Brahma Kumaris World
Spiritual University (BKWSU), the International Association of Soldiers for
Peace, Zonta International, International the Federation of Settlements and
Neighbourhood Centres (IFS), the International Council Of Women (ICW-CIF), the
International Youth and Student Movement for the United Nations (ISMUN),
Women’s Federation for World Peace International (WFWPI), Soroptimist
International (SI), the Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC), Buddha’s Light
International Association, World Young Women's Christian Association (World
YWCA), non-governmental organizations with general
consultative status
Dominicans
for Justice and Peace (Order of Preachers), Federación de Asociaciones de
Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos (España), Interfaith International,
Pax Romana (International the Catholic Movement for Intellectual and Cultural
Affairs and the International Movement of Catholic Students), Temple of
Understanding (TOU), the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
(WILPF), the Women’s World Summit Foundation (WWSF), International Society for
Human Rights (ISHR), the International Federation of University Women (IFUW),
Femmes Africa Solidarité (FAS), the Lutheran World Federation (LWF), the
Worldwide Organization for Women (WOW), the Union of Arab Jurists, Rencontre
Africaine pour la Defense des Droits de l’Homme (RADDHO), the Foundation for
the Refugee Education Trust (RET), International Bridges to Justice (IBJ), the
Inter-African Committee on Traditional Practices Affecting the Health of Women
and Children (IAC), the American Association of Jurists (AAJ), the
Lassalle-Institut, the UNESCO Centre of Catalonia, the Anti-Racism Information
Service (ARIS), the Pan Pacific and South East Asia Women’s Association
(PPSEAWA), the Permanent Assembly for Human Rights (APDH), the International
Movement for Fraternal Union Among Races and Peoples (UFER), the International
Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), the International Federation of Women in
Legal Careers (FIFCJ), the Canadian Federation of University Women (CFUW), the
International Association for Women's Mental Health (IAWMH), International
Women’s Year Liaison Group (IWYLG), the African Services Committee, Inc., the
International Federation of Family Associations of Missing Persons from Armed
Conflict (IFFAMPAC), Institute of International Social Development, African
Action on AIDS, the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS),
the Lama Gangchen World Peace Foundation (LGWPF), the Pax Christi
International, International Catholic Peace Movement, the Tandem Project,
Canadian Voice of Women for Peace (VOW), the Organization for Defending Victims
of Violence (ODVV), Solar Cookers International (SCI), the World Federation for
Mental Health (WFMH), the United States Federation for Middle East Peace, Network
Women in Development Europe (KULU), North-South XXI, the United Towns Agency
for North-South Cooperation, the World Association for the School as an
Instrument of Peace, the International Organization for the Elimination of All
Forms of Racial Discrimination (EAFORD), Latin American Committee for the
Defense of Women’s Rights (CLADEM), the African Women’s Association (AWA), the
United Nations Association of Spain (ANUE), Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers,
Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic, the International Forum for Child Welfare,
the BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights, the
Arab Lawyers Union, the General Federation of Iraqi Women, the International
Federation of Social Workers (IFSW), the International Association of Peace
Messenger Cities (IAPMC), the Committee for Hispanic Children and Families,
Peter Hesse Stiftung Foundation, Action Internationale pour la Paix et
Developpement dans la Region des Grands Lacs (AIPD-GL), the Federation for
Peace and Conciliation (FPC), National Council of Women of the United States of
America, Comite International pour le Respect et l’Application de la Charte
Africaine des Droits de l’Homme et des Peuples (CIRAC), the Cairo Institute for
Human Rights Studies (CIHRS), the World for the World Organisation (WFWO), the
Universal Esperanto Association, Associated Country Women of the World (ACWW),
International Grail, the Council of American Overseas Research Centres,
European Women’s Lobby, Zenab for Women in Development, The Grail, UNANIMA International,
Association for Democratic Initiatives (ADI), Congregation of our Lady of
Charity of the Good Shepherd, Centre for Development Studies and Action, Deniz
Feneri Association (Light House Aid and Solidarity Association), Arab Centre
for the Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession (ACIJLP),
Commission for the Defense of Human Rights in Central America (CODEHUCA),
International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL), General Arab Women
Federation (GAWF), National Alliance of Women’s Organisation (NAWO), MADRE,
inc, National Council of Women of Great Britain, Centre Independent des
Recherches et d'Initiatives pour le Dialogue (CIRID), African Commission of
Health and Human Rights Promoters (CAPSDH) , World Organisation against Torture
(OMCT), Guild of Service, Universal Peace Federation, International Association
of Schools of Social World (IASSW), International Fellowship of Reconciliation
(IFOR), Comision Colombiana de Juristas, COJEP International (Conseil de
Jeunesse Pluriculturelle), Association of African Women for Research and
Development (AAWORD), Scalabrini International Migration Network, World
Association for Phychosocial Rehabilitation (WAPR), Droit a l'Energie SOS
Futur, Asociación Civil Consorcio y
Desarrollo, Fundación Cultura de Paz, Foundation for Subjective
Experience and Research, Institute of International Social Development, African Women's Development and
Communication Network (FEMNET), Salvation Army, Planetary Association for Clean
Energy non-governmental organizations with
special consultative status,
The
Institute for Planetary Synthesis (IPS), the International Peace Bureau (IPB),
the UNESCO Centre for the Basque Country (UNESCO ETXEA), the 3HO Foundation
(Healthy, Happy, Holy Organization), the Dzeno Association, the Country Women
Association of Nigeria (COWAN), the Association Nigeriènne des Scouts de
l’Environnment (ANSEN), the International Peace Research Association (IPRA),
the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD), the International
Progress Organization (IPO), Gray Panthers, European Federation of Road Traffic
Crash Victims (FEVR),World Christian Life Community, International Association
of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Servas International, International Movement
Against Racial Discrimination (IMARD), Fondation Idole, Arab NGO Network for
Development, non-governmental
organizations on the Roster
Title:
The
human right to peace as part of the draft declaration on the right of peoples
and individuals to international solidarity[1][1]
Text:
I
The Spanish Society for International Human Rights Law (SSIHRL) welcomed on 30 October 2006 the adoption of the Luarca Declaration on the Human Right to Peace, which was drafted by a Committee of independent experts. It was the culmination of a process of extensive consultations within the Spanish civil society.
On 15 March 2007, the Luarca Declaration
on the Human Right to Peace was firstly presented to the fourth session of
the HR Council in an oral statement. Since then, the SSIHRL and more
than 500 NGO have organized
many parallel meetings at the Palais des Nations during the subsequent
sessions of the HR Council in order to analyse specific questions
regarding the content and scope of the human right to peace[2][2] and submitted
oral statements before the plenary.
At the same time, the
SSIHRL has developed its four-year World Campaign on the Human Right to Peace
organizing workshops and expert meetings on the human right to peace in all
regions of the world [3][3], sharing the content of the Luarca Declaration, and receiving new
inputs from different cultural sensibilities.
The Luarca Declaration was reviewed in the light
of the contributions received from various regional expert meetings on the
human right to peace. A new drafting committee of independent experts approved
on 24 February 2010 the Bilbao Declaration on the Human Right to Peace[4][4].
The Bilbao
Declaration on te Human Right to Peace was reviewed by the International Drafting Committee (ten experts from the five
geographical groups), which
approved on 2 June 2010 the Barcelona Declaration on the Human Right to
Peace by inspiring in the interests and aspirations of the international civil society as
a whole[5][5].
The Barcelona
Declaration on the Human Right to Peace shall be submitted to the International
Congress on the Human Right to Peace, to be organized by the SSIHRL in
Santiago de Compostela (Spain) on 9-10 December 2010[6][6].
Civil society shall be invited to discuss and adopt a final text of the
Declaration that will represent their aspirations in the codification of the
human right to peace. It shall also be invited to establish an International
Observatory on the Human Right to Peace within the SSIHRL.
Finally, the Santiago
Declaration on the Human Right to Peace, which is expected to be adopted on
10 December 2010, shall be submitted to the HR Council in 2011, urging its
Member States to initiate the official codification of the human right to
peace. This submission will close the four-year World Campaign of private
codification on the draft Universal Declaration on the Human Right to Peace
carried out by the SSIHRL.
II
Since 2007 the HR Council is
reaffirming the fundamental value of solidarity in 21st century international
relations. Along with the un Millennium Declaration (2000), it states that
“global challenges must be managed in a way that distributes costs and burdens
fairly, in accordance with basic principles of equity and social justice, and
that those who suffer, or who benefit least, deserve help from those who
benefit most”[7][7].
The HR Council also recognises that
so-called third generation rights, closely linked to the fundamental value of
solidarity, require greater progressive development in the context of the un’s
human rights mechanisms, in order to be able to respond to the recent problems
posed by international cooperation in this sphere[8][8].
As a result, the HR Council
proclaimed “the right of peoples and individuals to international
solidarity”[9][9]
and requested that the independent expert on human rights and international
solidarity continues preparing “a draft declaration on the right of peoples
and individuals to international solidarity”[10][10].
It also requested that the independent expert “further develops guidelines,
standards, norms and principles with a view to promoting and protecting this
right, by addressing, inter alia, existing and emerging obstacles to its
realisation”[11][11].
In his reports
to the HR
Council, the independent expert, Professor Rudi Muhammad Rizki (Malaysia)
stated from the first moment that the right to peace shall be part of
the future declaration on the right of peoples and individuals to
international solidarity. In his 2009 report, the
independent expert
concluded that there exists a principle of international solidarity, on the
basis of which it can be built a regulatory framework for human rights and
international solidarity, as well as for the emergence of a right of peoples
and individuals to international solidarity[12][12].
In his 2010 report the independent
expert reiterates that “there is an unequivocal value of solidarity and a related
value system that can inform ... the progressive development of .... an
evolving right of peoples and individuals to international solidarity”[13][13]. To him, the international solidarity
is “a precondition to human dignity, the basis of all human rights, and a
human-centred approach to development”[14][14]. He
concluded that the “international solidarity permeates the three pillars of the
Charter of the United Nations: peace and security; development; and human
rights. Development and human rights are the most secure basis for peace”[15][15].
III
Since
2008 the
Human Rights Council has been working on the “Promotion of the right
of peoples to peace” inspired by previous resolutions on this issue approved by
the UN General Assembly and the former Human Rights Commission, particularly
the GA resolution 39/11 of 12 November 1984, entitled “Declaration on the Right
of Peoples to Peace” and the United Nations Millennium Declaration.
In
2009 the Human Rights Council reviewed its position by recognizing the individual approach of the
right to peace. The
resolution 11/4 affirmed in the Preamble that “human rights include
social, economic and cultural rights and the right to peace, a healthy
environment and development, and that development is, in fact, the realization
of these rights” (paragraph 15 of Preamble); that, pursuant article 28 of the
Universal Declaration on Human Rights, “everyone is entitled to a social and
international order in which the rights and freedoms …can be fully realized”
(paragraph 17 of Preamble); and that a life without war is the primary
international prerequisite for the material well-being, development and
progress of countries and for the full implementation of the rights and
fundamental human freedoms proclaimed by the United Nations” (paragraph
19 of Preamble)[16][16].
Additionally, the Human Rights
Council reiterated the OHCHR to convene a workshop on the right of peoples to
peace, which was finally held on 15-16 December 2009 in Geneva. It concluded that on the basis of studies and latest developments of
doctrine and civil society, one might identify the contents and scope of the human
right to peace as an emerging right.
In June 2010 the HR Council had before it the report of the
Office of the High Commissioner on the outcome of the expert workshop on the
right of peoples to peace,[17][17] as well as the joint written
statement on
the Working Group on the Human Right to Peace of more than 500 NGOs world-wide conducted by the SSIHRL[18][18].
The HR Council approved on 17 June 2010
the resolution 14/3, which explicitly recognizes the “... the important work being carried out by civil
society organizations for the promotion of the
right of peoples to peace and the codification of that right"[19][19]; and, “supports the need to further promote the realization
of the right of peoples to peace" and in that
regard requests “the Advisory Committee, in consultation with Member States, civil
society, academia and all relevant stakeholders, to prepare a draft declaration
on the right of peoples to peace, and to report on the progress thereon to the
Council at its seventeenth session"[20][20].
The hr Council resolution 14/3 is reducing the
material content of the draft declaration to be prepared by the Advisory
Committee to the right of peoples to
peace. However, given that this resolution indirectly accepts the
individual dimension of this right[21][21], it
should not be a serious obstacle to preclude in the future to extent the
mandate of the Advisory Committee to prepare a draft declaration on the right of individuals and peoples to peace.
On the other hand, the Advisory Committee adopted on 6 August 2010 at its fifth session the
recommendation 5/2 entitled “on the promotion of the right of peoples to peace”
by which a drafting group of four members was established with the purpose of preparing by January 2011 a draft declaration on the right of peoples to
peace. After
that, the
Advisory Committee will distribute a questionnaire to be answered by Member
States, civil society, academia and all relevant stakeholders. A progress report will be then submitted to
the Human Rights Council at its seventeenth session in June 2011.
RECOMMENDATIONS
We invite
the independent
expert on human rights and international solidarity to consider in its future
declaration on the right of peoples and individuals to international solidarity the conclusions and recommendations of the workshop of
experts on the right of peoples to peace, in particular the recognition of the double dimension
-individual and collective- of the right to peace, and the written statement
sponsored by more than 500 NGO on this issue[22][22].
I In particular, the independent
expert should endeavour in the
future declaration to, inter alia:
a)
Consider the human right to peace as
a means to foster the right to self determination of peoples and all human rights, including the
right to development
b)
Recognize the relationship between human right to peace and rights to life, integrity, liberty and security of the person; physical and mental health and well-being;
the need to protect victims of uncontrolled
weapons of mass destruction; the need to examine the possibility of disarming all weapons; the right to emigrate; the right to know the truth of
human rights violations;and the exercise of civil, political, economic, social,
cultural and linguistic
rights to enhance social
justice, equity and gender equality, and the elimination of extreme poverty, since it will make possible the solidarity, peace and
friendly relations among all nations, races, ethnicities or religions.
c)
Stress solidarity
rights, peace education, and the construction of democratic, interactive and
egalitarian multiculturalism, as well as the promotion of dialogue and peaceful
coexistence among cultures, civilizations and religions.
d)
Affirm the realization
of the human right to peace as contained in the UN Charter, the UDHR and the international and
regional human rights instruments.
e)
Take into account the Luarca Declaration on the Human Right to
Peace of 2006, as reviewed by the Bilbao
Declaration on the Human Right to
Peace, adopted on 24 February 2010, in line with of the SSIHRL World
Campaign for the Human Right to Peace (2007-2010), taking into account the
reports of the expert meetings organized in the five regions of the world and the
regional Declarations on the human right to peace adopted by experts of civil society in La Plata, Yaoundé,
Bangkok, Johannesburg,
Sarajevo, Alexandria and Havana. In addition, joint NGO written and oral
statements on the content and scope of the human right to peace prepared with
the support of more than 500 NGO and submitted to the successive sessions of the HR Council (see http://www.aedidh.org); and finally, the Barcelona Declaration on the Human Right to Peace,
adopted on 2 June 2010 by the International Drafting Committee composed of 10 independent experts
of the five regions of the world, which granted an
international authority to the Luarca and Bilbao Declarations[23][23].
f) Further recognize the need to enhance gender mainstreaming in the field of peace-building as requested by the Beijing Declaration and Platform of Action, adopted by the Fourth World Conference on Women of 1995 and to promote women’s participation at all levels of decision-making on peace, disarmament and security issues, as provided for in Security Council resolution 1325 (2000), 1880 and 1888 (2009), as well as the need to perform a gender analysis in all situations of armed conflict and post-conflict societies.
[1][1] NGO without consultative status that also share the views expressed
in this statement: Monitoring Net of
Human Rights In Iraq (MHRI), The
Association of Iraqi POWs, Association of International Humanitarian Lawyers
(AIHL), Women's Will Association (WWA),
The Association of Iraqi Jurists (AIJ), Conservation Centre of Environmental
& Reserves In Iraq (CCERF), Human Rights Division of the Association of Muslims Scholars In Iraq
(AMSI), Al-Basaer Media Association (ABMA), Studies Center of Human Rights and
Democracy (SCHRD), Association of Human Rights Defenders In Iraq (AHRDI), The
Iraqi Commission for Human Rights (Iraqi-CHR), The Organization For Widows And
Orphans (OWO), The Iraqi Association Against War (IAAW), Organization for
Justice and Democracy In Iraq (OJDI), Association of Iraqi Diplomats (AID),
Arab Lawyers Network (UK), Iraqi Human Rights Center, Nepal International Consumers Union (NICU), Spanish Federation of Associations on Defensa and
Promotion of Human Rights (Asociación para
la Defensa de la Libertad Religiosa (ADLR), Asociación Pro Derechos Humanos de
España (APDHE), Associació per a les Nacions Unides a Espanya (ANUE), Comisión
Española de Ayuda al Refugiado (CEAR), Comunidad Bahá'í de España, Federación
Catalana d'Organitzacions no Governamentals pels Drets Humans, Fundación Paz y
Cooperación, Institut de Drets Humans de Catalunya (IDHC), Instituto de
Estudios Políticos para América Latina y África (IEPALA), Justicia y Paz.
España (JP. España), Liga Española Pro-Derechos Humanos (LEPDDHH), Movimiento
por la Paz, el Desarme y la Libertad (MPDL), Paz y Tercer Mundo – Mundubat
(PTM)), Foro 2010 de
Santiago de Compostela (AIPAZ,
SOIPAZ, Fundación Seminario de Investigación por la Paz de Zaragoza, Red de
Escuelas de Paz de Andalucía, Fundación Cultura de Paz en Barcelona, Baketik,
Instituto de Paz y Conflictos de la Universidad de Granada, Fundación per la
Pau, Cátedra Unesco de la Universidad Jaume I de Castellón, Igadi, Centro de
Estudios Sociais de la Universidad de Coimbra en Portugal, Fundación Galiza
Sempre, Altermundo, IGESIP, Institut Català Internacional per la Pau,
Coordinadora Gallega de ONGD, Consejo Internacional del Foro Mundial de
Educación, Confederación de STE, Colegio de Psicólogos de Galicia, CIP
Ecosocial de Madrid, Sociedad Iberoamericana de Pedagogía, Ospaaal Galicia,
Seminario Galego de Educación para a Paz, Médicos del Mundo), Hague Appeal for Peace (157 NGO worldwide, please
see in http://www.haguepeace.org)
[2][2] On 15 March 2007 both the SSIHRL and the International
Society of Human Rights (Frankfurt) convened an open Information Meeting on
the Luarca Declaration; on 16 March 2007, the SSIHRL organized a Technical
Meeting with NGO and human rights experts with a view to building a common
strategy for a world-wide campaign on the human right to peace; on 11 June
2007, both UNESCO Etxea and SSIHR organized an additional parallel meeting on
the relationship between peace and solidarity rights; on 12 September 2007,
the SSIHRL in collaboration with the UNESCO Liaison Office in Geneva organised
a Roundtable on the legal content of the human right to peace; on 21 September
2007, the SSIHRL organised the commemoration of the International Day of Peace
in the Council Chamber of the Palais de Nations; on 7 March 2008, the SSIHRL,
the International Society of Human Rights (Frankfurt) and UNESCO Etxea
organised a Roundtable on the relationship between extreme poverty and the
human right to peace; on 4 June 2008, the SSIHRL and UNESCO Etxea organised a
Roundtable on the right to education on peace and human rights; on 12 September
2008, the SSIHRL and UNESCO Etxea organised a Roundtable on the human right to
peace and indigenous peoples; on 19 September 2008, the SSIHRL, UNESCO Etxea
and the NGO Liaison Office of UNOG organised the commemoration of the
International Day of Peace in the Council Chamber of the Palais de Nations; on 17 March 2009 the SSIHRL and UNESCO Etxea organized a
roundtable on the human right to peace and racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance; on 3 June 2009 the SSIHRL, Women’s United
Nations Report Network and UNESCO Etxea organized a roundtable on migration and
peace; on 17 September 2009 the SSIHRL and UNESCO Etxea
organized a roundtable on peace and disarmament as solidarity rights; on 11
March 2010 the SSIHRL and UNESCO Etxea organized a roundtable on codification
of the human right to peace; and on 15 June 2010 the SSIHRL
and UNESCO Etxea, in collaboration with the International Association of
Democratic Lawyers, the International Peace Bureau, Interfaith International
and International Felloship of Reconciliation, organized another expert meeting
on the codification of human rights peace. The reports of these meetings are
available on www.aedidh.org
[3][3] Conferences and expert meetings have already taken place in the following places: Bilbao and Geneva (November 2006); Mexico (December 2006); Bogotá, Barcelona and Addis Ababa (March 2007); Caracas and Santo Domingo (April 2007); Morelia, Mexico (12 May 2007), Bogotá (12 May 2007), Oviedo and Santa Fe (New Mexico, USA, 16-17 May 2007); Washington (14 June 2007) , Nairobi (15 June 2007), Geneva (28 June 2007); Feldkirch (Austria, 31 August 2007); Geneva (11, 12 and 21 September 2007), Luarca (28 September 2007); Madrid (23 October 2007); Monterrey, Mexico (1st November 2007), Mexico DF, Geneva, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Zaragoza and Navía, Asturias (December 2007); on the occasion of the UN Commission on the Status of Women, New York (February 2008); Geneva (March 2008); Parliament of Catalonia, Barcelona, Geneva, Dakar, Madrid and Valencia (April 2008); Rome and Gwangju, Republic of Korea (May 2008); Geneva and Bilbao (June 2008); Cartagena, Spain, and Geneva (July 2008); Paris, Geneva and Montevideo (September 2008); Oviedo, Turin, New York and Basque Parliament, Vitoria (October 2008); La Plata and Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Bosco Marengo, Italy (November 2008); Luxembourg, Geneva and Barcelona (December 2008); Geneva and Barcelona (January 2009); Yaoundé, Cameroon (February 2009); Figaredo, Asturias, Geneva and New York (March 2009); Johannesburg, Seville, Madrid, Santiago de Compostela and Bangkok (April 2009); Trevi, Italy, Mexico and Seville (May 2009); Geneva (June 2009); Mexico City and Morelia (July 2009); Donostia-San Sebastián (August 2009); Geneva and Valdes (September 2009), Case, Cangas de Onis, Alcala de Henares and Sarajevo (October 2009); Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, University of Berkeley (USA) and Geneva (November 2009); Alexandria, Egypt (with IPS) and Geneva (December 2009); Havana, Cuba and Geneva (January 2010); Geneva (Switzerland) and Bilbao (Spain) (February 2010); Geneva (Switzerland) and New York (USA) (March 2010); Mexico City, April 2010, New York (USA) and Madrid (Chamber of Deputies) (May 2010); Barcelona, Ginebra, Santiago de Compostela and Kampala (Ouganda), (June 2010); Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (July 2010); Geneva, Montevideo (Uruguay) and Buenos Aires (Argentina) (August 2010). For more information on these meetings, please see http://www.aedidh.org
[4][4] The full text of the Bilbao
Declaration can be consulted in several languages in http://www.aedidh.org
[5][5] The full text of the Barcelona Declaration can be consulted in several languages in http://www.aedidh.org
[6][6] The Congress will be organised at the occasion of the "Forum 2010" (World Social Forum on Education for Peace), to be held on 7-13 December 2010 in Santiago de Compostela (Spain) http://www.foro2010.org
[7][7] Res. 6/3 of the Human Rights Council, 27 September 2007 and paragraph 1 of the resolution 12/9, 1 October 2009. Cfr. VILLÁN DURÁN, Carlos: “The human right to peace in the work
of the Human Rights Council”, in VILLÁN DURÁN (C.) y FALEH
PÉREZ (C.) (editors), Regional contributions for a Universal Declaration on the human right
to peace. Luarca, SSIHRL, July 2010, pp. 267-293, at
276-277
[8][8] Paragraph 4 of the resolution 6/3, cit., paragraph 5 of the
resolution 9/2 of the HR Council, 24 September 2008 and paragraph 6 of the
resolution 12/9, cit
[9][9] Paragraph 5 of the resolution 6/3, cit.
[10][10] Ibidem, paragraph 7
[11][11] Paragraph 7 of
the resolution. 9/2, cit. and paragraph 8 of the res. 12/9, cit.
[12][12] Doc. A/HRC/12/27, 22 July 2009, p. 2
[13][13] Doc. A/HRC/15/32, 5 July 2010, paragraph 40
[14][14] Ibidem, paragraph 58
[15][15] Ibidem, paragraph 61
[16][16] Resolution 11/4, 17 June 2009
[17][17] Doc. a/hrc/14/38 of 17 March 2010, 16 p.
[18][18] A/HRC/13/NGO/89, 25 February 2010
[19][19] Last paragraph of the preamble of the res. 14/3 cit.
[20][20] Ibídem
id., § 15 of the operative part.
[21][21] Preambular § 15, 18 and 20 of resolution 14/3, which reiterate same parapgraphs of resolution 11/4 of 2009, as discussed above.
[22][22] A/HRC/13/NGO/89, 25 February 2010, cit.
[23][23] All the civil society declarations above mentioned are
available on www.aedidh.org