The Fourth World Conference on Women
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Chapter 1. Resolution 1. Annex II - The Beijing Platform for Action
IV. Strategic Objectives and Actions
I. Human rights of women
Strategic objective I.1.
Strategic objective I.2.
Strategic objective I.3.
210. Human rights and fundamental freedoms are the birthright of all human
beings; their protection and promotion is the first responsibility of Governments.
211. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirmed the solemn commitment
of all States to fulfil their obligation to promote universal respect for, and observance
and protection of, all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, in accordance with
the Charter of the United Nations, other instruments relating to human rights, and
international law. The universal nature of these rights and freedoms is beyond question.
212. The promotion and protection of all human rights and fundamental
freedoms must be considered as a priority objective of the United Nations, in accordance
with its purposes and principles, in particular with the purpose of international
cooperation. In the framework of these purposes and principles, the promotion and
protection of all human rights is a legitimate concern of the international community. The
international community must treat human rights globally, in a fair and equal manner, on
the same footing, and with the same emphasis. The Platform for Action reaffirms the
importance of ensuring the universality, objectivity and non-selectivity of the
consideration of human rights issues.
213. The Platform for Action reaffirms that all human rights - civil,
cultural, economic, political and social, including the right to development - are
universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated, as expressed in the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights. The
Conference reaffirmed that the human rights of women and the girl child are an
inalienable, integral and indivisible part of universal human rights. The full and equal
enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by women and girls is a priority
for Governments and the United Nations and is essential for the advancement of women.
214. Equal rights of men and women are explicitly mentioned in the
Preamble to the Charter of the United Nations. All the major international human rights
instruments include sex as one of the grounds upon which States may not discriminate.
215. Governments must not only refrain from violating the human rights of
all women, but must work actively to promote and protect these rights. Recognition of the
importance of the human rights of women is reflected in the fact that three quarters of
the States Members of the United Nations have become parties to the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
216. The World Conference on Human Rights reaffirmed clearly that the
human rights of women throughout the life cycle are an inalienable, integral and
indivisible part of universal human rights. The International Conference on Population and
Development reaffirmed women's reproductive rights and the right to development. Both the
Declaration of the Rights of the Child 31/ and the Convention on the Rights of the Child
11/ guarantee children's rights and uphold the principle of non-discrimination on the
grounds of gender.
217. The gap between the existence of rights and their effective enjoyment
derives from a lack of commitment by Governments to promoting and protecting those rights
and the failure of Governments to inform women and men alike about them. The lack of
appropriate recourse mechanisms at the national and international levels, and inadequate
resources at both levels, compound the problem. In most countries, steps have been taken
to reflect the rights guaranteed by the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women in national law. A number of countries have established
mechanisms to strengthen women's ability to exercise their rights.
218. In order to protect the human rights of women, it is necessary to
avoid, as far as possible, resorting to reservations and to ensure that no reservation is
incompatible with the object and purpose of the Convention or is otherwise incompatible
with international treaty law. Unless the human rights of women, as defined by
international human rights instruments, are fully recognized and effectively protected,
applied, implemented and enforced in national law as well as in national practice in
family, civil, penal, labour and commercial codes and administrative rules and
regulations, they will exist in name only.
219. In those countries that have not yet become parties to the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and other international
human rights instruments, or where reservations that are incompatible with the object or
purpose of the Convention have been entered, or where national laws have not yet been
revised to implement international norms and standards, women's de jure equality is not
yet secured. Women's full enjoyment of equal rights is undermined by the discrepancies
between some national legislation and international law and international instruments on
human rights. Overly complex administrative procedures, lack of awareness within the
judicial process and inadequate monitoring of the violation of the human rights of all
women, coupled with the underrepresentation of women in justice systems, insufficient
information on existing rights and persistent attitudes and practices perpetuate women's
de facto inequality. De facto inequality is also perpetuated by the lack of enforcement
of, inter alia, family, civil, penal, labour and commercial laws or codes, or
administrative rules and regulations intended to ensure women's full enjoyment of human
rights and fundamental freedoms.
220. Every person should be entitled to participate in, contribute to and
enjoy cultural, economic, political and social development. In many cases women and girls
suffer discrimination in the allocation of economic and social resources. This directly
violates their economic, social and cultural rights.
221. The human rights of all women and the girl child must form an
integral part of United Nations human rights activities. Intensified efforts are needed to
integrate the equal status and the human rights of all women and girls into the mainstream
of United Nations system-wide activities and to address these issues regularly and
systematically throughout relevant bodies and mechanisms. This requires, inter alia,
improved cooperation and coordination between the Commission on the Status of Women, the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Commission on Human Rights,
including its special and thematic rapporteurs, independent experts, working groups and
its Subcommission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, the
Commission on Sustainable Development, the Commission for Social Development, the
Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, and the Committee on the Elimination
of Discrimination against Women and other human rights treaty bodies, and all relevant
entities of the United Nations system, including the specialized agencies. Cooperation is
also needed to strengthen, rationalize and streamline the United Nations human rights
system and to promote its effectiveness and efficiency, taking into account the need to
avoid unnecessary duplication and overlapping of mandates and tasks.
222. If the goal of full realization of human rights for all is to be
achieved, international human rights instruments must be applied in such a way as to take
more clearly into consideration the systematic and systemic nature of discrimination
against women that gender analysis has clearly indicated.
223. Bearing in mind the Programme of Action of the International
Conference on Population and Development 14/ and the Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action 2/ adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights, the Fourth World Conference on
Women reaffirms that reproductive rights rest on the recognition of the basic right of all
couples and individuals to decide freely and responsibly the number, spacing and timing of
their children and to have the information and means to do so, and the right to attain the
highest standard of sexual and reproductive health. It also includes their right to make
decisions concerning reproduction free of discrimination, coercion and violence, as
expressed in human rights documents.
224. Violence against women both violates and impairs or nullifies the
enjoyment by women of human rights and fundamental freedoms. Taking into account the
Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women and the work of Special
Rapporteurs, gender-based violence, such as battering and other domestic violence, sexual
abuse, sexual slavery and exploitation, and international trafficking in women and
children, forced prostitution and sexual harassment, as well as violence against women,
resulting from cultural prejudice, racism and racial discrimination, xenophobia,
pornography, ethnic cleansing, armed conflict, foreign occupation, religious and
anti-religious extremism and terrorism are incompatible with the dignity and the worth of
the human person and must be combated and eliminated. Any harmful aspect of certain
traditional, customary or modern practices that violates the rights of women should be
prohibited and eliminated. Governments should take urgent action to combat and eliminate
all forms of violence against women in private and public life, whether perpetrated or
tolerated by the State or private persons.
225. Many women face additional barriers to the enjoyment of their human
rights because of such factors as their race, language, ethnicity, culture, religion,
disability or socio-economic class or because they are indigenous people, migrants,
including women migrant workers, displaced women or refugees. They may also be
disadvantaged and marginalized by a general lack of knowledge and recognition of their
human rights as well as by the obstacles they meet in gaining access to information and
recourse mechanisms in cases of violation of their rights.
226. The factors that cause the flight of refugee women, other displaced
women in need of international protection and internally displaced women may be different
from those affecting men. These women continue to be vulnerable to abuses of their human
rights during and after their flight.
227. While women are increasingly using the legal system to exercise their
rights, in many countries lack of awareness of the existence of these rights is an
obstacle that prevents women from fully enjoying their human rights and attaining
equality. Experience in many countries has shown that women can be empowered and motivated
to assert their rights, regardless of their level of education or socio-economic status.
Legal literacy programmes and media strategies have been effective in helping women to
understand the link between their rights and other aspects of their lives and in
demonstrating that cost-effective initiatives can be undertaken to help women obtain those
rights. Provision of human rights education is essential for promoting an understanding of
the human rights of women, including knowledge of recourse mechanisms to redress
violations of their rights. It is necessary for all individuals, especially women in
vulnerable circumstances, to have full knowledge of their rights and access to legal
recourse against violations of their rights.
228. Women engaged in the defence of human rights must be protected.
Governments have a duty to guarantee the full enjoyment of all rights set out in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights by women
working peacefully in a personal or organizational capacity for the promotion and
protection of human rights. Non-governmental organizations, women's organizations and
feminist groups have played a catalytic role in the promotion of the human rights of women
through grass-roots activities, networking and advocacy and need encouragement, support
and access to information from Governments in order to carry out these activities.
229. In addressing the enjoyment of human rights, Governments and other
actors should promote an active and visible policy of mainstreaming a gender perspective
in all policies and programmes so that, before decisions are taken, an analysis is made of
the effects on women and men, respectively.
Promote and protect the human rights of women, through the full
implementation of all human rights instruments, especially the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women Actions to be
taken
230. By Governments:
(a) Work actively towards ratification of or accession to and implement international and
regional human rights treaties;
(b) Ratify and accede to and ensure implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women so that universal ratification of the Convention
can be achieved by the year 2000;
(c) Limit the extent of any reservations to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women; formulate any such reservations as precisely and as
narrowly as possible; ensure that no reservations are incompatible with the object and
purpose of the Convention or otherwise incompatible with international treaty law and
regularly review them with a view to withdrawing them; and withdraw reservations that are
contrary to the object and purpose of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women or which are otherwise incompatible with international treaty
law;
(d) Consider drawing up national action plans identifying steps to improve the promotion
and protection of human rights, including the human rights of women, as recommended by the
World Conference on Human Rights;
(e) Create or strengthen independent national institutions for the protection and
promotion of these rights, including the human rights of women, as recommended by the
World Conference on Human Rights;
(f) Develop a comprehensive human rights education programme to raise awareness among
women of their human rights and raise awareness among others of the human rights of women;
(g) If they are States parties, implement the Convention by reviewing all national laws,
policies, practices and procedures to ensure that they meet the obligations set out in the
Convention; all States should undertake a review of all national laws, policies, practices
and procedures to ensure that they meet international human rights obligations in this
matter;
(h) Include gender aspects in reporting under all other human rights conventions and
instruments, including ILO conventions, to ensure analysis and review of the human rights
of women;
(i) Report on schedule to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
regarding the implementation of the Convention, following fully the guidelines established
by the Committee and involving non-governmental organizations, where appropriate, or
taking into account their contributions in the preparation of the report;
(j) Enable the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women fully to
discharge its mandate by allowing for adequate meeting time through broad ratification of
the revision adopted by the States parties to the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination against Women on 22 May 1995 relative to article 20, paragraph 1,
32/ and by promoting efficient working methods;
(k) Support the process initiated by the Commission on the Status of Women with a view to
elaborating a draft optional protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women that could enter into force as soon as possible on a right of
petition procedure, taking into consideration the Secretary- General's report on the
optional protocol, including those views related to its feasibility;
(l) Take urgent measures to achieve universal ratification of or accession to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child before the end of 1995 and full implementation of
the Convention in order to ensure equal rights for girls and boys; those that have not
already done so are urged to become parties in order to realize universal implementation
of the Convention on the Rights of the Child by the year 2000;
(m) Address the acute problems of children, inter alia, by supporting efforts in the
context of the United Nations system aimed at adopting efficient international measures
for the prevention and eradication of female infanticide, harmful child labour, the sale
of children and their organs, child prostitution, child pornography and other forms of
sexual abuse and consider contributing to the drafting of an optional protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child;
(n) Strengthen the implementation of all relevant human rights instruments in order to
combat and eliminate, including through international cooperation, organized and other
forms of trafficking in women and children, including trafficking for the purposes of
sexual exploitation, pornography, prostitution and sex tourism, and provide legal and
social services to the victims; this should include provisions for international
cooperation to prosecute and punish those responsible for organized exploitation of women
and children;
(o) Taking into account the need to ensure full respect for the human rights of indigenous
women, consider a declaration on the rights of indigenous people for adoption by the
General Assembly within the International Decade of the World's Indigenous People and
encourage the participation of indigenous women in the working group elaborating the draft
declaration, in accordance with the provisions for the participation of organizations of
indigenous people.
231. By relevant organs, bodies and agencies of the United Nations system,
all human rights bodies of the United Nations system, as well as the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, while
promoting greater efficiency and effectiveness through better coordination of the various
bodies, mechanisms and procedures, taking into account the need to avoid unnecessary
duplication and overlapping of their mandates and tasks:
(a) Give full, equal and sustained attention to the human rights of women in the exercise
of their respective mandates to promote universal respect for and protection of all human
rights - civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights, including the right to
development;
(b) Ensure the implementation of the recommendations of the World Conference on Human
Rights for the full integration and mainstreaming of the human rights of women;
(c) Develop a comprehensive policy programme for mainstreaming the human rights of women
throughout the United Nations system, including activities with regard to advisory
services, technical assistance, reporting methodology, gender-impact assessments,
coordination, public information and human rights education, and play an active role in
the implementation of the programme;
(d) Ensure the integration and full participation of women as both agents and
beneficiaries in the development process and reiterate the objectives established for
global action for women towards sustainable and equitable development set forth in the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development; 18/
(e) Include information on gender-based human rights violations in their activities and
integrate the findings into all of their programmes and activities;
(f) Ensure that there is collaboration and coordination of the work of all human rights
bodies and mechanisms to ensure that the human rights of women are respected;
(g) Strengthen cooperation and coordination between the Commission on the Status of Women,
the Commission on Human Rights, the Commission for Social Development, the Commission on
Sustainable Development, the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, the
United Nations human rights treaty monitoring bodies, including the Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women, and the United Nations Development Fund for
Women, the International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women, the
United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Children's Fund and other
organizations of the United Nations system, acting within their mandates, in the promotion
of the human rights of women, and improve cooperation between the Division for the
Advancement of Women and the Centre for Human Rights;
(h) Establish effective cooperation between the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and other relevant bodies,
within their respective mandates, taking into account the close link between massive
violations of human rights, especially in the form of genocide, ethnic cleansing,
systematic rape of women in war situations and refugee flows and other displacements, and
the fact that refugee, displaced and returnee women may be subject to particular human
rights abuse;
(i) Encourage incorporation of a gender perspective in national programmes of action and
in human rights and national institutions, within the context of human rights advisory
services programmes;
(j) Provide training in the human rights of women for all United Nations personnel and
officials, especially those in human rights and humanitarian relief activities, and
promote their understanding of the human rights of women so that they recognize and deal
with violations of the human rights of women and can fully take into account the gender
aspect of their work;
(k) In reviewing the implementation of the plan of action for the United Nations Decade
for Human Rights Education (1995-2004), take into account the results of the Fourth World
Conference on Women.
Ensure equality and non-discrimination under the law and in practice
Actions to be taken
232. By Governments:
(a) Give priority to promoting and protecting the full and equal enjoyment by women and
men of all human rights and fundamental freedoms without distinction of any kind as to
race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinions, national or social
origins, property, birth or other status;
(b) Provide constitutional guarantees and/or enact appropriate legislation to prohibit
discrimination on the basis of sex for all women and girls of all ages and assure women of
all ages equal rights and their full enjoyment;
(c) Embody the principle of the equality of men and women in their legislation and ensure,
through law and other appropriate means, the practical realization of this principle;
(d) Review national laws, including customary laws and legal practices in the areas of
family, civil, penal, labour and commercial law in order to ensure the implementation of
the principles and procedures of all relevant international human rights instruments by
means of national legislation, revoke any remaining laws that discriminate on the basis of
sex and remove gender bias in the administration of justice;
(e) Strengthen and encourage the development of programmes to protect the human rights of
women in the national institutions on human rights that carry out programmes, such as
human rights commissions or ombudspersons, according them appropriate status, resources
and access to the Government to assist individuals, in particular women, and ensure that
these institutions pay adequate attention to problems involving the violation of the human
rights of women;
(f) Take action to ensure that the human rights of women, including the rights referred to
in paragraphs 94 to 96 above, are fully respected and protected;
(g) Take urgent action to combat and eliminate violence against women, which is a human
rights violation, resulting from harmful traditional or customary practices, cultural
prejudices and extremism;
(h) Prohibit female genital mutilation wherever it exists and give vigorous support to
efforts among non-governmental and community organizations and religious institutions to
eliminate such practices;
(i) Provide gender-sensitive human rights education and training to public officials,
including, inter alia, police and military personnel, corrections officers, health and
medical personnel, and social workers, including people who deal with migration and
refugee issues, and teachers at all levels of the educational system, and make available
such education and training also to the judiciary and members of parliament in order to
enable them to better exercise their public responsibilities;
(j) Promote the equal right of women to be members of trade unions and other professional
and social organizations;
(k) Establish effective mechanisms for investigating violations of the human rights of
women perpetrated by any public official and take the necessary punitive legal measures in
accordance with national laws;
(l) Review and amend criminal laws and procedures, as necessary, to eliminate any
discrimination against women in order to ensure that criminal law and procedures guarantee
women effective protection against, and prosecution of, crimes directed at or
disproportionately affecting women, regardless of the relationship between the perpetrator
and the victim, and ensure that women defendants, victims and/or witnesses are not
revictimized or discriminated against in the investigation and prosecution of crimes;
(m) Ensure that women have the same right as men to be judges, advocates or other officers
of the court, as well as police officers and prison and detention officers, among other
things;
(n) Strengthen existing or establish readily available and free or affordable alternative
administrative mechanisms and legal aid programmes to assist disadvantaged women seeking
redress for violations of their rights;
(o) Ensure that all women and non-governmental organizations and their members in the
field of protection and promotion of all human rights - civil, cultural, economic,
political and social rights, including the right to development - enjoy fully all human
rights and freedoms in accordance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and all
other human rights instruments and the protection of national laws;
(p) Strengthen and encourage the implementation of the recommendations contained in the
Standard Rules on the Equalization of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities, 30/
paying special attention to ensure non-discrimination and equal enjoyment of all human
rights and fundamental freedoms by women and girls with disabilities, including their
access to information and services in the field of violence against women, as well as
their active participation in and economic contribution to all aspects of society;
(q) Encourage the development of gender-sensitive human rights programmes.
Achieve legal literacy Actions to be taken
233. By Governments and non-governmental organizations, the United Nations
and other international organizations, as appropriate:
(a) Translate, whenever possible, into local and indigenous languages and into alternative
formats appropriate for persons with disabilities and persons at lower levels of literacy,
publicize and disseminate laws and information relating to the equal status and human
rights of all women, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Racial Discrimination, 33/ the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, the
Declaration on the Right to Development 34/ and the Declaration on the Elimination of
Violence against Women, as well as the outcomes of relevant United Nations conferences and
summits and national reports to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
Women;
(b) Publicize and disseminate such information in easily understandable
formats and alternative formats appropriate for persons with disabilities, and persons at
low levels of literacy;
(c) Disseminate information on national legislation and its impact on
women, including easily accessible guidelines on how to use a justice system to exercise
one's rights;
(d) Include information about international and regional instruments and
standards in their public information and human rights education activities and in adult
education and training programmes, particularly for groups such as the military, the
police and other law enforcement personnel, the judiciary, and legal and health
professionals to ensure that human rights are effectively protected;
(e) Make widely available and fully publicize information on the existence
of national, regional and international mechanisms for seeking redress when the human
rights of women are violated;
(f) Encourage, coordinate and cooperate with local and regional women's
groups, relevant non-governmental organizations, educators and the media, to implement
programmes in human rights education to make women aware of their human rights;
(g) Promote education on the human and legal rights of women in school
curricula at all levels of education and undertake public campaigns, including in the most
widely used languages of the country, on the equality of women and men in public and
private life, including their rights within the family and relevant human rights
instruments under national and international law;
(h) Promote education in all countries in human rights and international
humanitarian law for members of the national security and armed forces, including those
assigned to United Nations peace-keeping operations, on a routine and continuing basis,
reminding them and sensitizing them to the fact that they should respect the rights of
women at all times, both on and off duty, giving special attention to the rules on the
protection of women and children and to the protection of human rights in situations of
armed conflict;
(i) Take appropriate measures to ensure that refugee and displaced women,
migrant women and women migrant workers are made aware of their human rights and of the
recourse mechanisms available to them.
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