INTERVENTION BY THE HOLY SEE DELEGATION
TO THE UNITED NATIONS
ON THE OCCASION OF THE 55th SESSION
OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
ON ITEM 42 "WORLD SUMMIT FOR CHILDREN"
Wednesday, 15 November 2000
Mister President:
In the discussion of the upcoming
Special Session for the follow-up of the World Summit for Children, the Holy
See appreciates the opportunity to add its voice to those who share the same
concerns for today’s children and young people.
Mister President,
"Despite the technological
progress, children still suffer and die from the lack of basic nourishment, or
as victims of violence and armed conflicts that they do not even understand.
Others are victims of emotional neglect. There are people who poison the minds
of the young by passing on to them prejudices and empty ideologies. And today,
children are exploited even to the point of being used to satisfy the lowest
depravities of adults". These are not new words, but unfortunately
they are just as valid and just as necessary. These were the words that Pope
Paul VI, addressed to Henry Labouisse, the Executive Director of UNICEF in
1978.
This past April, the Commission on
Human Rights expressed its concern that the situation of children in many
parts of the world remains critical as a result of poverty, inadequate social
and economic conditions in an increasingly globalized world economy,
pandemics, natural disasters, armed conflicts, displacement, exploitation,
illiteracy, hunger, intolerance, disability and inadequate legal protection.
Those issues concerning children
that have demanded the attention of the world for so many years continue to be
the center of our attention. The recently adopted optional protocols to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child are evidence of that concern. The Holy
See, as one of the first signatories of the Convention is happy to note that
it has also signed these two important protocols which add to the strength of
resolve that the world directs toward the protection of children.
In recent years, the United Nations
has been aided by the activities of the Special Representative for Children in
Armed Conflicts and of the Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child
prostitution and child pornography, to focus on the needs and challenges that
children continue to face. The UN has also welcomed the work of the ILO
concerning child labor. These efforts along with the ongoing attention of the
offices of the High Commissioners for Human Rights and for Refugees and the
United Nations Agencies, especially UNICEF, continue to work toward the
fullest implementation of the Convention and the provisions of the Summit.
The Catholic Church has always
recognised that children are the most precious and, at the same time, the most
vulnerable members of the human family and in need of the greatest protection.
The Holy See was an active participant in the elaboration of the Convention on
the Rights of the Child and at the World Summit and, as an Observer,
participates with special interest in any discussion involving children at the
United Nations.
The Holy See looks forward to the
preparatory work that these offices and agencies will bring to the Special
Session and is confident that their involvement will greatly help focus the
discussions and deliberations that will lead to the fruitful conclusion of the
Session.
Having applauded the convening of
the World Summit for Children, the Holy See looks forward to the upcoming
Special Session as an important event at which the family of nations might
once again come together to recommit itself to a greater understanding of the
means to address the safeguarding of the well-being and the protection of life
and rights of the world’s children.
My Delegation hopes that the
discussions, during the upcoming preparatory meetings, will center especially
on how to bring peace to situations of armed conflict and violence, end
hunger, protect the family, strengthen education, stop discrimination, provide
better health care, build stability and maintain security.
At the same time, my Delegation also
sees the need to remind that the rights of children depend on parents, the
family and the entire world community. The promotion and protection of human
rights and fundamental freedoms can only come from a recognition of and a
respect for the human dignity shared by each and every person.
Mister President:
It is the hope of the Holy See that
the discussions throughout the United Nations system will center around ways
to move forward, rather than simply languish on issues that are never
resolved. May the upcoming Special Session be a concrete step toward achieving
this goal.
Thank you Mr. President.
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