CONTRIBUTORS - Human
Rights/Humana
"Mess with us - we'll raise a fuss" -
"Si nos molestan - quejaremos

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Human Rights & The Third World
Until the collapse of the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), the Third
World was defined as "undeveloped or
developing countries not aligned with communist
countries." When communism crashed and the
"Soviet Bloc" disintegrated, the Third
World (non-aligned) nations lost the defining
relationship that had set them apart from the
First World (Capitalist nations), and Second
World (Communist Nations), for half a century. A
new measurement is now arising to identify
"civilized" governments from
"uncivilized" political systems. It has
little or no reference to the old surface labels
like "capitalism" or
"communism". It goes straight to the
matter of political morality.
Through the prism of our new
world view, the global neighbors are not so much
grading each other on a basis of economic
preferences, as they are on their
"civilized" behavior - or lack of it.
Under the moral suasion of the United
Nations "Universal Declaration of
Human Rights" a group of major powers have
foresworn such plain outrages as genocide,
slavery, torture, female circumcision and child
prostitution, and are now urging that everyone
follow their example. There are teeth in the
request.
Arguably, a better yardstick for
measuring the differences between nations and
societies is to be found in their demonstrated
civilized inclinations, rather than mere economic
systems and prefered methods of keeping the books
of account.
Thus it is that, increasingly, we
see "respectable" nations refusing to
support or do business with countries that fail
to measure up to rapidly developing international
standards in the area of "human
rights."
Political murder, expropriation
of private property, incarceration without due
process of law, cruel and inhuman punishments for
crimes, and similar malum en se (read:
wrong because they are wrong) crimes against
inherent individual (human) rights and the
developing universal public conscience, are no
longer being gracefully tolerated. Nations that
persist in victimizing the weak, poverty-stricken
and socially unpopular among them, are
increasingly having to pay a high price for their
non-conformity to humanitarian, legal and
accepted social norms.
Until quite recently, outside
protests against shameful, inhuman, vicious and
excessively draconian treatment of helpless
citizens, were received in high dudgeon by the
offending countries. Such efforts, they were
quick to point out, constituted
"interference in internal affairs," and
were diplomatically "unacceptable"
within the established protocols of national
sovereignty.
This "cop out" is no
longer viable in the company of civilized
nations.
The world is learning to honor a
higher authority than "national
sovereignty". It is the rule of reason,
and the refreshing idea that individuals are
endowed with certain inalienable rights that
governments may not invalidate or abridge, except
under carefully applied legal processes.
The word is out that the
international community will no longer
countenance crimes against individuals and
disadvantaged groups, on the part of vicious,
vindictive, rapacious governments. The penalty
for doing so is exclusion from the company and
commerce of respectable nations.
This adds up to a higher price
than most rogue nations are willing - or able -
to pay.
Lorenzo
Dee Belveal
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