Topic 4 - Human Rights
Topic 4 - Human Rights
Introduction
Every human being regardless of one’s color, religion, age, sex, nationality, the
geographical place where one lives or whether rich or poor ought to enjoy the same
claims of freedom and lawful guarantees.
Human rights protect individual human beings or groups of human beings from actions
that might interfere or stop one from enjoying them. These rights are claimed from
society in which human beings live.
the word ‘human’ means people and not plants, animals or machines. A man, woman
and a child are human.
Rights are the basic things that a human being needs in life, in order to have dignity,
fair treatment and equality. These basic things include food, shelter, clothing, equality
before the law and freedom to assemble and speak.
Definition:
Human Rights refers to the freedom, justice, and equality that a human being is ethically
and legitimately entitled to, simply because one is a human being.
All over the history of mankind there has been rules and laws with elements of Human
Rights which were acknowledged. The United Nation (UN) traces the origin of human
rights from the year 539 BCE, when the troops of Cyrus the great conquered Babylon.
Cyrus freed the slaves and declared that all human beings had the right to choose them
on religion and established racial equality. The precepts which are part of the first four
(4) articles of the UN charter of human rights and other provisions were recorded on a
big cylinder called the Cyrus cylinder.
In religious doctrine, the ‘golden rule’ of ‘Do unto others as you would have them do
unto you,’ which summarizes rights and responsibilities, found in the Christian Bible
Characteristics are distinguishing features that set something apart. In the case of Human
Rights, they have distinct qualities that distinguish them from other rights. The following are
the characteristics of Human Rights:
Inalienable right is a right that cannot Inalienable means those things that cannot be
be taken away or given to another taken away or separated or given away.
person.
Similarly, Human Rights cannot be taken away
nor be given away. People have Human Rights even when these are being violated or even if
the laws or those in power do not recognize, promote or protect them. Human Rights cannot
be taken away nor can any person deprive another of the right to have and enjoy them. Human
Rights cannot be forfeited or be diminished by one’s failure to exercise them even though one
can be unaware of his or her rights. Human Rights are a legal (lawful) entitlement for all
members of society.
Human Rights Are Universal because they apply to all people everywhere in the world and are
the same for all people in the world regardless of race, sex, color, ethnicity, religion, political,
geographical, beliefs, nationality or social status.
Human Rights are indivisible because all rights are equally important and they cannot be
divided or subtracted from. There is no hierarchy (high or low rank) in Human Rights. Every
right has equal status. Human Rights should be enjoyed in totality. One cannot deny someone
the right to food, clothes, medical care or shelter then grant the person the right to life and
assume that the person is enjoying all fundamental Human Rights. Therefore, the right to life
is depended and related to the right to food, clothes, medical care and these rights cannot be
divided. In order for one to live to the full, one needs the rights to food, shelter, clothing and
medical care. If one is denied the right to education, it is most likely that the person may never
fulfil their full potential and earn a decent living. This means that rights depend on each other
to be fulfilled in order to enjoy all rights. The denial of a right to nationality also stops one
from freedom of movement as the person may not have a passport to enable one to travel to
outside countries. This is why rights are said to be indivisible, interdependent and interrelated.
International Human Rights have been categorized into Civil and Political Rights; Economic,
Civil and Political Rights are also called ‘First Generation’ Rights. They are first generation
rights because they were the first rights to be recognized as rights of the individual. Civil and
political rights stress the freedom of the individual and places obligation on the government
not to interfere in the life of the individual. Civil and Political Rights are also found in the
Constitution of Zambia. They include:
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights are called ‘Second Generation’ Rights. This category
consists of rights that are economic, social and cultural in nature. Their realization brings about
social justice, dignity and equity. The government is required to take deliberate action or steps
to bring about conditions in which every person enjoys adequate standards of economic, social
and cultural rights. This category includes the:
Right to food
Collective Rights
These are also known as ‘Third Generation Rights’. They are the most recently identified
rights. The term collective rights refer to the rights of peoples to be protected from attacks on
their group identity and group interests. The most important such collective right is often said
to be the right of self-determination.
Third-generation human rights are those rights that go beyond the mere civil and social, as
expressed in many progressive documents of international law. They include the
‘1972Stockholm Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment’,
the ‘ 1992Rio Declaration on Environment and Development’ and other pieces of generally
desirable "soft law." These are called soft law because they have not been enacted into legally
binding documents. The difficulty in enacting them into legally binding documents is because
of the principle of sovereignty which respects decisions of a nation. The other reason is that of
the influence and power of nations that might go against the provisions of the rights. These
rights are best described as solidarity rights because they require international cooperation and
aim at community-built ding.
The term "third-generation human rights" remains largely unofficial, and thus houses an
extremely broad spectrum of rights, including:
All the same these rights are not legally binding; they provide a framework for the enjoyment
of all other rights.
Human rights violation refers to the partial or total disregard and the transgression of the human
rights standards and principles, as prescribed in the human rights charter, human rights
convention’s and treaties.
In the modern times, the violation of civil and political rights has been on considerable scale,
in foam of a Genocide, war crimes, crime against humanity and massacres, have been recorded.
For example,
human rights are such an integral aspect of human life and development. However, human
rights are importance because of the following:
1. Everyone is free and all Individuals deserve to be treated in the same way.
2. all Individuals are equal despite differences in skin color, sex, religion, language for
example.
3. Everyone has the right to life and to live in freedom and safety.
4. No one has the right to treat another person as a slave or make anyone a slave.
5. No one has the right to hurt or torture another person.
6. Everyone has the right to be treated equally by the law.
7. The law is the same for everyone, it should be applied in the same way to all.
8. Everyone has the right to ask for legal help when their rights are not respected.
9. No one has the right to imprison any person unjustly or expel any person from his or
her own country.
10. Everyone has the right to a fair and public trial.
11. Everyone should be considered innocent until guilt is proved.
12. Everyone has the right to ask for help if someone tries to harm him or her, but no one