Political Science, asked by awmboihiralte, 9 months ago

In national emergency situation , is human rights more inportant than state sovereignty

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Answered by mamtasharma36958
1

Answer:

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Answered by csnipane11
1

Explanation:

The important principle of national sovereignty must not be used as a curtain behind which human rights violations were carried out with impunity, the representative of Sweden said this afternoon as the General Assembly continued its consideration of the Secretary-General's annual report on the work of the Organization.

The United Nations Charter had established a system of collective security, but security did not first involve States but also individuals, he said. Too often State security was used to undermine the security of individuals. The Secretary-General's reference to a "collective conscience of humanity" had implied an obligation to act wherever the security of individuals was imperilled, and the United Nations was the obvious forum to take such action.

The Security Council must find a way of bypassing the impasse- creating and consensus-blocking veto, the Malaysian representative stressed. He also said that sanctions -- that powerful instrument of coercion -- had unfortunately often resulted in dire consequences for ordinary people such as in Iraq. Following seven years of the most punitive sanctions ever imposed on a people, the Council bore the burden of ameliorating the suffering of the Iraqis people, even as it grappled with issues related to peace and security in that region. Sanctions should be imposed only when absolutely necessary, and bear the stamp of specific objectives and timeframes, he added.

The Cuban representative said that while he understood the reality of a globalized world, the "unipolar and neo-liberal" nature of that world, financial blackmail against the United Nations, and the double- standards of the Security Council and tyranny of some of its members made it "suicidal" for his country to endorse the right of global intervention as already exercised in Kosovo. The United Nations, itself, was in urgent need of democratization: the General Assembly must exercise its power, even in conflicts; and the Security Council must be expanded to include the equitable representation of developing countries

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