NELSON MANDELA
(Born 1918)
ADDRESS OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA, NELSON MANDELA,
AT THE 53RD UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY:
New York, 21 September 1998
Mr.President;
Mr Secretary General, the Hon.Kofi Annan;
Your Excellencies;
Ladies and Gentlemen,
" Quite appropriately, this 53rd General Assembly will be remembered
through the ages as the moment at which we marked and celebrated the 50th
Anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Born in the aftermath of the defeat of the Nazi and fascist crime against
humanity, this Declaration held high hope that all our societies would, in
future, be built on the foundation of the glorious vision spelt out in each
of its clauses.
For those who had to fight for their emancipation, such as ourselves who,
with your help, had to free ourselves from the criminal apartheid system,
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights served as the vindication of the
justice of our cause.
At the same time, it constituted a challenge to us that our freedom, once
achieved, should be dedicated to the implementation of the perspectives
contained in the Declaration.
Today, we celebrate the fact that this historic document has survived a
turbulent five decades, which have seen some of the most extraordinary
developments in the evolution of human society.
These include the collapse of the colonial system, the passing of a bipolar
world, breath-taking advances in science and technology and the
entrenchment of the complex process of globalisation.
And yet, at the end of it all, the human beings who are the subject of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights continue to be afflicted by wars and
violent conflicts.
They have, as yet, not attained their freedom from fear and death that
would be brought about by the use of weapons of mass destruction as well as
conventional arms.
Many are still unable to exercise the fundamental and inalienable
democratic rights that would enable them to participate in the
determination of the destiny of their countries, nations, families and
children and to protect themselves from tyranny and dictatorship.
The very right to be human is denied everyday to hundreds of millions of
people as a result of poverty, the unavailability of basic necessities such
as food, jobs, water and shelter, education, health care and a healthy
environment.
The failure to achieve this vision contained in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights finds dramatic expression in the contrast between wealth
and poverty which characterises the divide between the countries of the
North and the countries of the South and within individual countries in all
hemispheres.v
It is made especially poignant and challenging by the fact that this
coexistence of wealth and poverty, the perpetuation of the practice of the
resolution of inter and intra-state conflicts by war and the denial of the
democratic right of many across the world, all result from the acts of
commission and omission particularly by those who occupy positions of
leadership in politics, in the economy and in other spheres of human
activity.
What I am trying to say is that all these social ills which constitute an
offence against the Universal Declaration of Human Rights are not a
pre-ordained result of the forces of nature or the product of a curse of
the deities.
They are the consequences of decisions which men and women take or refuse
to take, all of whom will not hesitate to pledge their devoted support for
the vision conveyed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
This Declaration was proclaimed as Universal precisely because the founders
of this Organisation and the nations of the world who joined hands to fight
the scourge of fascism, including many who still had to achieve their own
emancipation, understood this clearly that our human world was an
interdependent whole.
Necessarily, the values of happiness, justice, human dignity, peace and
prosperity have a universal application because each people and every
individual is entitled to them.
Similarly, no people can truly say it is blessed with happiness, peace and
prosperity where others, as human as itself, continue to be afflicted with
misery, armed conflict and terrorism and deprivation.
Thus can we say that the challenge posed by the next 50 years of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, by the next century whose character
it must help fashion, consists in whether humanity, and especially those
who will occupy positions of leadership, will have the courage to ensure
that, at last, we build a world consistent with the provisions of that
historic Declaration and other human rights instruments that have been
adopted since 1948."