Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2004-01-14-Speech-3-161"
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"en.20040114.3.3-161"2
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"Mr President, as Mr Ahern reminded us this morning, respect for human rights lies at the core of European politics. Despite all the Union’s efforts, however, human rights are still being violated in too many areas, not only in the rest of the world but even within the EU itself.
Trafficking in human beings, trafficking in organs, new forms of slavery that demand our attention in the third millennium, the unregulated use of the Internet that all too often breaches our countries’ laws and becomes a vehicle for paedophilia, for the trade in human beings and for spreading information among terrorists who have no respect for human life and dignity – these are just a few of the many examples we could give.
We must call on the United Nations to ensure that rights that are violated in so many countries today are respected. The children that are forced to work or become guerrilla fighters in order to survive are also those children who in our rich societies see their images and their bodies used for commercial activities, in violation of the rights that their age confers on them.
Too many words and statements have been uttered in reaction to urgent situations which actually require strong political decisions, such as the decision to stop the use of children to advertise or promote income-generating activities, and the decision to make certain economic relationships with third countries conditional on respect for human rights. Those countries that do not have a secular system but one based on enforcing the
with everything that that religious law entails in violation of human rights, should be made to face clear decisions by the Union and the international community. Although cooperation remains a way of getting closer to the population, maintaining normal economic relations with governments that breach the principle of human rights would be wrong and would clearly contradict all the fine words we have uttered in recent years. We ask the Irish Presidency, with the support of Parliament, to put forward the need for stronger and more political statements at its next meeting with the United Nations."@en1
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