潘基文秘书长在荷兰莱顿大学的演讲
Thank you for your warm welcome.It is a privilege and honour to be invited to address this prestigious academicinstitution. I would also like to thank the other co-hosts, the City of Leidenand the Leiden University Medical Center.
Leiden University is aninternationally renowned hub of learning and research with a history thatstretches back many centuries.
Indeed, one of the pioneers ofinternational law and the principles that guide the United Nations began hisstudies here more than 400 years ago, the legendary jurist Hugo Grotius.
Many distinguished scholars havefollowed. Today, each of you is carrying forward that proud tradition.
I thank you for your commitmentand want to single out for special praise your University’s global focus andapproach to education.
Ladies and gentlemen,
We are here to talk aboutfreedom. I can think of no better time or place.
Leiden is synonymous with freedom.
Leiden University’s credo is“Bastion of Liberty”, and the city itself carries the motto “for the sake offreedom”.
This is also a very special day.Earlier today, I took part in events marking the 100th anniversary of the PeacePalace in The Hague. And on this date fifty years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King,Jr. delivered his monumental “I Have a Dream” speech.
Dr. King spoke of the “riches offreedom and the security of justice”. He reminded the world that the rights ofany minority should be the cause of all.
As he said, “their freedom isinextricably bound to our freedom”.
In other words, we share a commonfuture with shared responsibilities.
That understanding is even truertoday.
Our freedom … our possibilities…. our perils … are linked like never before.
The United Nations Charter speaksto our shared fate – and highlights the need “to promote social progress andbetter standards of life in larger freedom”.
The word “freedom” suffuses theUniversal Declaration of Human Rights.
Our work to deepen the meaning offreedom is built on three pillars: development — or freedom from want; peaceand security — or freedom from fear; and human rights — or simply the freedomto enjoy and exercise the full body of human rights.
These pillars are interdependentand mutually reinforcing.
There can be no peace withoutdevelopment … no development without peace …and neither can be achieved withoutfull respect for human rights and the rule of law.
Today I would like to addressthose three dimensions of freedom.
Let me begin with freedom fromwant.
At the dawn of this newmillennium, the international community set out on an unprecedented journey totackle freedom from want around the world.
The Millennium Development Goalsare our touchstone for this effort. The eight goals and associated targets makeup our blueprint to fight poverty and hunger, expand education and health,empower women and girls, and ensure environmental sustainability.
Thanks to combined efforts fromgovernments to the grassroots, we have made important progress.
The proportion of people livingin extreme poverty has been halved. Fewer children are losing their lives tomalaria and tuberculosis. And more than 2.1 billion people gained access toimproved sources of drinking water – a challenge on which the Netherlands andKing Willem-Alexander have been global leaders.
But there is much unfinishedbusiness.
Nineteen thousand children underage five still die each day, most from preventable diseases.
Two and a half billion peoplestill lack access to sanitation.
Disparities between differentsocial groups are widening.
Environmental sustainability isunder severe threat.
Our planet is strained andstretched.
We must intensify our efforts intwo crucial ways.
First, with less than 1,000 daysbefore the deadline to achieve the MDGs, we must accelerate progress.
Second, we must shape a globalagenda beyond 2015 with poverty eradication and sustainable development at itscore.
These twin challenges will befront and centre at the United Nations next month as world leaders gather forthe opening of the General Assembly.
We have already begun the vitaldiscussion on crafting a post-2015 agenda that is ambitious, inspiring anduniversal – relevant to all people and all societies.
I will continue to stress theimportance of empowering women and girls.
Societies cannot be free if halftheir citizens cannot pursue their full potential. At the United Nations, I amstriving to lead by example. have nearly doubled the number of women in themost senior UN positions. Our top officials for humanitarian affairs, humanrights, health, development and disarmament are women. So, too, is my chief ofstaff.
I am proud that for the firsttime in history, five UN peacekeeping operations involving tens of thousands oftroops are led by women.
The empowerment of women is partof a wider effort to make sure that all people are able to exercise their rightto participate in the development process.
When people are engaged and takeownership, they can become a strong force to promote local governance –advance the rule of law — deepen democracy, development and peace – and spreadfreedom.
But they need our support.
I know this is a time ofausterity. Budgets are tight everywhere, including here in the Netherlands. Butwe cannot short-change investments that are needed to lift the lives of theworld’s most vulnerable people.
At the same time, I have stressedaccountability to ensure that governments everywhere do the most with whateverthey have. Budget priorities around the world must reflect people’s priorities.
And yet still every year, morethan a trillion dollars is drained on weapons of war. The time has come tospend less on arsenals that destroy and more on tools that build.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Development and peace are twosides of the same coin. Freedom from want goes hand in hand with freedom fromfear – building sustainable peace and security. This is the second pillar.
Earlier this year, I travelled tothe Democratic Republic of the Congo with Dr. Jim Kim, President of the WorldBank.
It was the first-ever such jointvisit. We went to support a framework for peace and security to end fighting inone of the most battle-scarred places on earth.
The UN has tried to keep andbuild peace there for more than 50 years. But we are modernizing our approach –engaging regional partners and civil society and putting an even greater focuson improving the lives of people on the ground.
A peace deal must deliver a peacedividend.
People need to see the fruits ofpeace in their own lives – through schools, jobs, basic services, theopportunities to live in freedom.
Around the world, we arereinvigorating the United Nations’ use of preventive diplomacy and mediation,peacekeeping and post-conflict peacebuilding to tackle 21st century challenges.
That is the way to buildsocieties founded on hope instead of fuelled by fear.
That leads me to the third pillarof freedom –the freedom to enjoy and exercise human rights.
All States have committed toensuring their people freedom of opinion and expression … freedom of religionor belief … freedom of assembly and association … and freedom of movement.
Yet in far too many places, wesee opposition and obstacles to those freedoms.
It could come in the form ofcostly law enforcement machinery to sanction or spy on those who speak out.
It could be shutting downinternet and media outlets, or detaining dissidents, journalists or humanrights defenders.
Think of the reporter imprisonedfor having revealed corruption.
The woman not allowed to wear herheadscarf or another who is not allowed to show her hair.
The human rights NGO prohibitedfrom receiving funding.
The person with disabilities notallowed to vote.
The students forbidden frompeacefully demonstrating against misrule.
Fear is often the driver forrestrictions of freedom.
Fear of the new. Fear of theunknown. Fear of what is different. Fear of allowing others a say in thedecisions affecting their lives. Or sometimes, simply, fear of the truth.
We see this in rising examples ofnational legislation that restrict human rights defenders and civil society.
There are a growing number oflaws being wrongly used to impede their work, including anti-terrorism andnational security legislation; laws relating to public morals, defamation orblasphemy; cumbersome laws on the registration, functioning and funding ofassociations; official-secrets legislation; and legislation regulating Internetaccess.
We see it in dozens of countriesthat still criminalize consensual, same-sex relationships.
We see it in bans on minarets andother restrictions that drive wedges in society by targeting minorities andmigrant communities.
We see it in arbitrary bans onpeaceful assemblies.
And we see it in surveillanceprogrammes that have grown ever more aggressive.
Let me be clear. Concerns aboutnational security and criminal activity may justify exceptional andnarrowly-tailored use of surveillance.
But surveillance withoutsafeguards to protect the right to privacy hampers fundamental freedoms.
People should feel secure in theknowledge that their private communications are not being unduly or unjustlyscrutinised by the State.
Those disclosing information onmatters that have implications for human rights need to be protected.
Although some in power mightclaim they need to curtail freedoms to preserve order, this in fact could havethe opposite effect.
Yes, protecting freedom is notfree. It requires investments. But curtailing freedom also carries a heavyprice.
When people do not have a meansto channel their grievances – when they are not allowed to speak out, protestpeacefully or exercise their democratic rights, stability will suffer.
Look no further than the MiddleEast and North Africa, where decades of oppression brought about uprisingswhich have now led to death and devastation. This morning, I spoke about mydeep concerns regarding Syria at the Peace Palace ceremony, I am also closelywatching the situation in Egypt.I have offered one word of advice to leadersaround the world:
Listen.
Listen to the concerns, demandsand hopes of your people.
If you do not listen to yourpeople, you will hear from them – in the streets, in the squares, or mosttragically on the battlefield.
Is there a way out? Yes.
The answer is more participation.More democracy. More understanding. More freedom.
I once again appeal to leadersacross the world to promote dialogue, reconciliation and support for inclusivepolitical transitions.
This is the way to build stable,democratic, free and united societies.
Here in Europe, which has servedas such a remarkable engine of integration, I make a special plea fortolerance, understanding and acceptance of diversity and the rights of migrantsand refugees.
Ladies and gentlemen,
We have many challenges beforeus. But there are also many reasons to be hopeful.
Again and again, we have seenthat when people are engaged on a local or global level, change can happen.Restrictions on freedoms can be lifted.
For example, over the past twodecades, thanks to human rights activism across the globe, nearly 40 countrieshave decriminalized same-sex relations. The Netherlands has been a pioneer –and I have sought to lead the way at the United Nations as a proud defender ofLGBT equality.
But the real credit belongs tothe voices and the activism of ordinary people who stand up and speak out.
We saw such extraordinaryactivism twenty years ago at the World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna. Aninspiring assembly of governments and thousands of people from all over theworld joined forces – mothers of the disappeared, indigenous peoples,minorities, migrants.
They came together to say humanrights are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated.
We are all “born free and equalin dignity and rights”. We all have a right to live in freedom and equality.
As Grotius said more than 400years ago, States’ rights come from all of us as individuals; the power of thestate is the result of collective agreement.
With such sovereignty comesresponsibility.
A responsibility to make surethat no person – regardless of ethnicity, gender, geography, disability, raceor other status – is left behind, denied universal human rights or basiceconomic opportunities.
A responsibility towards freedomof the individual, for development and peace to flourish.
We have examples that guide us …leaders that inspire us … and international standards that bind us.
Let us draw on them to widen thecircle of freedom for one and all.
Thank you.
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