Human rights council also appoints special rapporteur to monitor impact of climate crisis on rights
Geneva - The UN’s main human rights body has overwhelmingly voted to recognise the right to a safe, clean, healthy and sustainable environment as a human right, and to appoint an expert to monitor human rights in the context of the climate emergency.
The human rights council passed the clean-environment resolution, which also calls on countries to boost their abilities to improve the environment, by 43-0 while four member states – China, India, Japan and Russia – abstained.
Lucy McKernan, deputy director for UN advocacy at Human Rights Watch, called the clean-environment measure a “significant advance” to help address the global environmental crisis.
“Global recognition of this right will help empower local communities to defend their livelihoods, health, and culture against environmental destruction, and help governments develop stronger and more coherent environmental protection laws and policies,” she said.
Another resolution creates a three-year post of a “special rapporteur” who will – among other things – monitor “how the adverse effects of climate change, including sudden and slow onset disasters, affect the full and effective enjoyment of human rights.”
The votes came on the second-last day of the 47-member council’s autumn session, which among other things approved a special rapporteur to monitor rights in Afghanistan – a vote opposed by Pakistan – and ended an effort to monitor rights in war-torn Yemen.
Links
- The climate crisis is destroying the human rights of those least responsible for it
- Climate refugees can't be returned home, says landmark UN human rights ruling
- Climate crisis is greatest ever threat to human rights, UN warns
- ‘Climate apartheid’: UN expert says human rights may not survive
- The frenetic fan dance of the fools tells us the Coalition has reached crunch time on climate
- The Amazon rainforest is losing 200,000 acres a day. Soon it will be too
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