Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2010-06-15-Speech-2-606"

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"en.20100615.32.2-606"2
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"Mr President, Commissioner, the Charter for Women’s Rights, which is the subject of the debate, refers to the acts of the United Nations. The victims of this procedure are the national governments, which alone are responsible for implementing their decisions taken on the basis of national needs. To refer to the United Nations is an effective means of diluting the authority of the national institutions. We do not need a charter while existing legal instruments have not been implemented. However, as a result of collective ignorance, we women prefer to be presented with a new declaration than to fight to implement legally binding instruments. This charter is contributing to a paradoxical development in the European Union. We are already in the habit of regulating morality. Now, social engineering is generating an unusual paradox in the Union. We are privatising state economies on the pretext of free competition, but we are nationalising relations between men and women. The Union is copying the bad experiences we lived through in Central and Eastern Europe. It is a pity that social engineering does not take account of historical experiences in order to avoid a new defeat, the first victims of which will be women."@en1
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3http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/rdf/spokenAs.ttl.gz

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