Buraku Liberation News, November 1998 issue (No.106)
The Osaka Declaration Challenges of Human Rights Education for the 21st Century .The Century of Universal Realization of Human Rights
Declaration of the International Conference on Human Rights Education in the Asia-Pacific Region
Supporting the United Nations Decade for Human Rights Education (1995-2004) which promotes human rights education all around the world, and re-affirming the recommendations and calls to action in the Conference-Workshop on Asia-Pacific Human Rights Education for Development (Manila, 1995) and the Workshop on Asia-Pacific Human Rights Education: Tasks for the UN Decade for Human Rights Education in the Asia-Pacific Region (Sydney, 1996);
Emphasizing the importance of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which guided efforts during the last 50 years towards universal realization of human rights and stimulated the adoption of many international human rights instruments;
Considering all the international human rights instruments which clearly set out our rights as persons and as peoples, and prohibit all forms of discrimination against women, indigenous peoples, untouchables, Buraku and other minorities, people with different abilities, foreigners, immigrants, migrant workers, the elderly, children and victims of HIV/AIDS;
Considering the situation in the Asia-Pacific where many countries still suffer from the damage brought about by armed conflicts, religious conflicts, colonial rule and invasion, where many people suffer from dictatorship, where traditional practices in conflict with human rights dominate many societies, where ethnic conflicts are aggravated by globalization, where discrimination based on caste continues, and where xenophobia and racism are rampant;
Being concerned about the abuse of power by law enforcement agencies, military and paramilitary forces in many countries in the region;
Being concerned about the hardships and persistent discrimination that all oppressed people in the region face, especially women, children, minorities, indigenous peoples, untouchables, immigrants and migrant workers;
Being concerned that such hardships have been exacerbated by the emphasis of several governments on economic growth at the expense of human rights and environment, and by the current economic crisis in the region resulting in a widening gap between the rich and the poor;
Being concerned about the hypocrisy of the so-called Asian values promoted by some Asian government leaders, the lack of attention to positive local traditional values, the manipulation of religion by political and social institutions, and the hegemonic use of human rights for political purposes which result in selective application of human rights standards;
Being also concerned about the absence, or lack of implementation, in most countries in the region, of national action plans called for by the UN General Assembly and the Plan of Action for the UN Decade, the lack of human rights curriculum in most institutions of formal education and in programmes of non-formal education, and the lack of awareness by many people of their own human rights guaranteed by the international human rights law and their own national constitutions and laws;
Recognizing the importance of human rights education as a strategy to address the abovementioned problems in the Asia-Pacific region notably inter-related problems of globalization, discrimination and oppression;
Noting the need for integrating ideas of sustainable development and other global issues into human rights education;
Recognizing the efforts of many groups in the region who believe in the inherent power of people and therefore adopt participatory human rights education approaches to conscienticize and bring out the creativity of people, and to make political leaders accountable for their responsibilities, obligations and commitments to achieve universal realization of human rights;
The participants of the International Conference on Human Rights Education in the Asia-Pacific Region declare that: