PAX
ROMANA - ICMICA
ASIA
PACIFIC REGIONAL ADVOCACY WORKSHOP
ON
HUMAN RIGHTS AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
BALI, INDONESIA
22-28, MAY 2002
BALI
DECLARATION ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND ECOLOGICALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE
VARIOUS PARTS OF THE ASIA PACIFIC REGION
We, over seventy men and
women, from eleven country members of Pax Romana-ICMICA[1],
met in Bali, Indonesia, from 22 to 28 May 2002 for the Asia Pacific Advocacy Workshop on Human Rights and Sustainable
Development in association with the 4th PrepCom of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD)[2]
from 27 May to 7 June 2002.
We shared our peoples’ concern and struggle for human
rights and analysed these issues in Asia Pacific with the help of inputs by
experts. We were encouraged by the
presence of civil society groups and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs)
committed to work with governments and United Nations (UN) Agencies toward the
realisation of sustainable development and were inspired by the effect of the
local Balinese community initiatives in realising this issue. Our commitment toward strengthening human
rights and sustainable development was further strengthened by our reflections
on realities of Asia in the light of our Christian faith and other great
spiritual traditions of Asia Pacific peoples.
We:
1. welcome the decision of the UN General Assembly at its 55th session
to hold the WSSD in Johannesburg in 2002 to take forward the process initiated
at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992;
2. recognise that, despite progress in some
areas, the principles and objectives of Rio contained in Agenda 21 have not
been sufficiently implemented in particular in the Asia Pacific region;
3. assert that the growing influence of the
business sector at government and inter-governmental levels demands accountable
and legally binding principles to
ensure that industry and business incorporate human right and sustainable
development principles;
4. express our deep concern at
the lack of effective mechanisms for civil society to fully and effectively
participate at all levels of sustainable development policies and
implementation;
These concerns are best
served by an ethical imperative rooted in the sacred dimension of human life.
The universe is not so much an aggregate of commodities but rather a community
of beings. Normative human values grow from this understanding of the
world.
Asia Pacific cultures and
religious traditions clearly express such inter-connectedness and
inter-dependence in social relations, ethical norms and ritual action. When
development is divorced from an ethical imperative and the world is treated
merely as a material resource for human use, development becomes unsustainable
while cultures and religious traditions rooted in cosmic spirituality are
marginalized. We believe human rights are inter-dependant with ecologically
sustainable development.
In line with these insights,
we seek to discern key areas that need to be rethought in terms of
sustainability where social progress, human rights and environmental protection
are seen as integral parts of authentic human development for present and
future generations.
1. The unfettered
exploitation of natural resources deprives people of their basic rights to a
clean and safe environment.
2. Disregard for
preserving biodiversity depletes the renewable processes of the earth and the
capacity of future generations to use these resources in sustaining their
livelihood.
3. Unequal access to
basic necessities and other environmental resources is a strong contributing
factor to poverty. Renewable resources diminished by extractive modes of
production exacerbate poverty.
7. Denial of the
right to self-determination, politically and resource motivated wars, military
dictatorships, inter-religious strife and ethnic conflict damage infrastructure
and society’s ability to live a sustainable existence.
2.
Governments,
businesses and the international financial institutions must act with integrity
and to be genuinely pro-poor, integrating poor people’s human rights and
environmental concerns with effective policies and practices. It is imperative to secure for poor people
access to financial and natural resources and provide the means by which they
can participate in government’s decision on resource allocations.
3. Governments, businesses and inter-governmental institutions such as the World Trade Organisation (WTO), World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) must ensure its work programmes are not narrowly focused on market liberalization as the prime and overall objective. Instead, the focus must be on the need for making trade a tool that serves sustainable development, incorporating social, environmental and human rights concerns.
4. The operations of
the business sector are not only for their own profits, but also for common
good. We call upon the international
community to increase accountability and transparency within the corporate
sector by legally binding conventions, and to redirect corporations toward
behaviour that genuinely serves the common good. This includes building a code
of conduct, wherever possible, with affirmative action for the poor.
5.
The
rights of local communities and indigenous peoples to natural resources are
essential. We call for the respect of
indigenous peoples’ territories and self-determination as a basic precondition
for strengthening the processes of partnership and governance for sustainable
development. Indigenous peoples should
be guaranteed full and effective participation at all levels of sustainable
development institutions, programs and policies, and recognize their prior
roles as traditional knowledge bearers.
There is no sustainable
development without human rights, no human rights without an ethical
imperative, and no ethical imperative without a deep spiritual appreciation of
our interconnected universe. We are
aware that such an ethical worldview is fundamentally at odds with the
consumerist values of a market-driven economy.
This poses new challenges for political structures and human
relationships.
As humans we are connected
to all of its forms, and are responsible and accountable for the preservation
of this bountiless earth that sustains life.
We call upon communities to
engage in proactive interfaith and intercultural dialogue to broaden their
understanding of how other faiths inform human sustainability through their
spirituality and ways of life.
We, members of Pax-Romana
ICMICA, commit ourselves to this vision and urge the leadership within the
Church and its partner organisations to work with us towards the realization of
a model of life that is based on ecologically sustainable development founded
upon the principles of human rights.
[1] An international Non Governmental Organization (NGO) in consultative status with United Nations Economic and Social Council and a member of the Conference of International Catholic Organization (ICO).
[2] The WSSD itself will take place in Johannesburg, South Africa from August 26 to September 4, 2002.