Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
24 June 2019
HUMAN
RIGHTS IN DEMOCRACY
[“Australia should treat its membership in the UN Human
Rights Council as both an opportunity and responsibility to be a leader in
defending human rights abroad and at home,” said Elaine Pearson, Australia director at Human Rights Watch. “Promoting human
rights values includes publicly raising rights issues with foreign leaders, not
just making generic statements of concern in Geneva.”] Human Rights Watch
The
question that comes to my mind is whether Human Rights in America would look
the same when manifested in say Sri Lanka or Australia? How does a right
develop? Does Australian government have the natural right to question
another government on bilateral basis? Does Australian Citizen have the right
to question a Sri Lankan citizen in relation to human rights?
Yesterday,
I wrote : [Yesterday for example, the businessman to whom we lent money
said to me that the last person through whom we paid him the loan was a ‘black’
person and that ‘black’ persons did not suit them. Since our employees are
usually from toddy tapper village of Thunaivi - black means low caste to this
guy. ]
The above guy said it to
me - a person of senior caste. Does that amount to breach in human right to be
equal? Or does it become a breach when the other person or a member of his
group hear it and feel hurt? Most importantly does any other group like Human
Rights Watch have the right to question this guy directly and/or through his
government? A nation’s rights are based on the consolidated value developed by
all of its People and is an intrinsic part of the people. Watch groups may
observe, report and highlight. But they have no right to judge except as part
of that group.
Ms Elaine Pearson for
example is presented as follows: ‘Pearson
writes frequently for publications including Harper's Bazaar, the Guardian and
the Wall Street Journal. She is an adjunct lecturer in law at the University
of New South Wales. From 2007 to 2012 she was the Deputy Director of Human
Rights Watch's Asia Division based in New York.’
I wrote
the book ‘Naan Australian’ based on my direct experiences at the
University of NSW where the Police were called in by the Vice Chancellor’s
office to arrest me for trespass. I was doing the parallel of Ms Elaine Pearson
but based on my true experienced pain. The arrest was unlawful. To the extent
Ms Elaine Pearson carries the name of University
of New South Wales - Ms Pearson is as
guilty as the University in acting in breach of my basic right to have my
experienced grievances escalated to the Governing Council which is the ultimate
body responsible for issues in common with the Public. Had that passage been
facilitated by fellow Australians my book would have carried the title ‘Naam
Australians’ (we are Australians) instead of Naan Australian (I am Australian).
I write
practically every day - including from Sri Lanka - as I am doing right now -
and this is also Australian and Sri Lankan to the extent I feel Australian and
Sri Lankan. That is how true rights are developed. President Kennedy said to
ask what we can do for the country ? - I did not ask. I just did and am
continuing to do to share and quietly place myself in the folks whom I
recognize are breachers of my rights and therefore the rights of those
who are a part of me. The more we ‘show’ the less we have to share. Hence I
keep the showing to help ‘foreigners’ who - like the Vice Chancellor of the
University of NSW have made negative contributions.
In
April Ms Pearson wrote under the heading ‘More
Must be Done to Protect Academic Freedoms Under Threat from China’
If Ms
Pearson did not know that I was acting to protect that very right at the
University of NSW - then as per my conclusion - Ms Pearson is not qualified to
question at National level. The individual carries that basic right as per
her/his contribution to a relationship, family, work institution, community and
nation. The other side changes from a seen relative to unseen common
person who is within us as our other side. The above mentioned Vaddukoddai
businessman hurt me because I had him in me. The Vice Chancellor of UNSW hurt
me because I invested in the Vice Chancellor through due processes applicable
to our relationship. Due processes born out of experience in that institution
are the Energy-sharing pathways that our heritage facilitates. That Energy
combined forces with others like themselves - which facilitated my book to find
a home in Australian National Library. Many global participants contributed to
this carriage of True Justice and therefore the protection of my Human Right to
uphold my truth in any institution I believe I belong to. It would not have
happened if the Australian National were like the University of NSW.
Australians have the first right to share within Australia before sharing with
‘foreigners’. Until then our government has the basic right to limit its
commitment to making intellectual contributions through the UN and other common
governing bodies. The latter are Due Processes to respect the UN ancestors who
had the experience - not just as officials but as those who felt the pain of
victims as theirs. From time to time governments become victims due to abuse of
the facilities by citizens and refugees. I have come across many of them and I
become the government and discipline them. That is true and natural protection
of Human Rights.
As per
my discovery - one needs to believe to be entitled to protection of the right
which is the first recognition of that belief by oneself and then shared
with others. No Belief , No Human Right.
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