The Working Group of the Permanent Council of the Organization of American States (OAS) on the Inter-American System of Human Rights has concluded its work,
as was explained today during a regular session of the Council by the Group’s Chair and Permanent Representative of Mexico, Joel Hernández, who added that its conclusions are in a report to be submitted to the body that brings together the Member States in its first meeting in January.
The document is the result of deliberations over the last six months by the Special Working Group to Reflect on the Workings of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights with a View to Strengthening the Inter-American Human Rights System.
The report conducts an evaluation of the operations of the system and formulates recommendations in the following areas, among others: challenges and objectives in the medium and long term; cautionary measures; procedural matters; friendly solutions; promotion of human rights; and financial strengthening of the Inter-American System of Human Rights. “We achieved a report thanks to the spirit of the delegations and the will to formulate concrete recommendations,” the representative of Mexico said.
In this regard, the Chair of the Working Group on the Protection of Human Rights of Older Persons and Alternate Representative of Argentina to the OAS, Ana Pastorino, presented before the permanent representatives the "report on the situation of older people in the hemisphere and the effectiveness of binding universal and regional instruments on human rights in relation to the protection of the rights of the elderly."
In her speech, Pastorino noted "the situation of vulnerability for older people in the hemisphere on the exercise of their rights and "the need for governments to ensure that this vulnerable group enjoy, as all other citizens, of all civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights." She also recalled that "although there are some instruments of regulation and protection, these are not legally binding." The Convention will fill that gap as an instrument that obliges countries to protect the human rights of older persons "under the urgency imposed by the escalation of demographic change."
The Permanent Council also approved a proposal from the Permanent Mission of Canada to convene the Third Meeting of the REMJA Working Group of Officials Responsible for Penitentiary and Prison Policies of the Meeting of the Ministers of Justice or Other Ministers or Attorneys General of the Americas (REMJA), to be held in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, on February 20-22 of 2012.
The Alternate Representative of Canada to the OAS, Douglas Janoff, encouraged all Member States to participate in the hemispheric meeting to exchange views and deepen collaboration in the administration of correctional and penitentiary systems, a subject he described as "an ongoing challenge for all our countries."
The agenda of today’s Permanent Council also included a review of the results of the Third Meeting of Ministers Responsible for Public Security in the Americas (MISPA III), held in Port of Spain on November 17 - 18, 2011. The Permanent Representative of Trinidad and Tobago, Neil Parsan, presented a summary of the discussions and presentations made at the meeting and highlighted the achievements accomplished in terms of police
Download Caribarena's Android App
Click To Download
0 Comments In This Article