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UNESCO participates in African Judicial Dialogue

Building on previous co-operation with the African Court of Human and Peoples鈥 Rights, UNESCO showed its support for the fourth annual dialogue organized by the Court, which took place in Kampala from 30 October to 1 November.
Titled 鈥淭ackling contemporary human rights issues: the role of the judiciary in Africa鈥, the event attracted senior judges from across Africa, and was opened by H.E. Yoweri Museveni, president of Uganda.
The forum covered issues such as the rights of refugees and indigenous people, the right to bring legal action concerning elections result disputes, and the issue of rights in relation to the fight against terrorism.
In opening remarks, the honourable Justice Sylvain Ore, as President of the African Court of Human and Peoples鈥 Rights, urged more African countries to accede to the protocol allowing individuals and NGOs to bring cases to the Court.
In his remarks, Guy Berger, UNESCO director for Freedom of Expression and Media Development, highlighted how the rights to freedom of expression and access to information help to promote and protect the particular rights under focus in the agenda of the judges鈥 dialogue.
Berger also shared the work that UNESCO is doing to promote knowledge of international and regional standards for freedom of expression within Africa鈥檚 judicial processes.
He added: 鈥淯NESCO works with African governments and stakeholders to replace enduring colonial era laws with legal instruments that are more suited to Africa鈥檚 Agenda 2063, and which are also more conducive to achieving the universal Sustainable Development Goals 鈥 especially the goal that calls for public access to information and fundamental freedoms.鈥
91麻豆国产精品自拍 memoranda of co-operation with the African Court of Human and Peoples鈥 Rights, the ECOWAS Court, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the Ibero-American Summit of Judges, and the Latin American prosecutors association, said Berger.
He noted further that UNESCO operates various training programmes for judges, which have now involved over 12000 people in the judiciary in Latin America, while a pilot in Africa has reached 1800 and will continue at larger scale in the future.
Berger drew attention of the judges to the date of 2 November, designated by the UN General Assembly as the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists. The date selected by the UN General Assembly is 2 November, which is when two French journalists were assassinated by terrorists on African soil.
鈥淎 total of 51 journalists have been murdered in Africa in the past five years, with most of these crimes of ultimate censorship being committed with complete impunity,鈥 said the UNESCO Director.
However, he recognized that there had been major jurisdictional strides in protecting free expression in several African institutions of justice, such as key rulings on torture and killings of journalists and criminal defamation.
鈥淯NESCO hopes there will be many more such judicial decisions, and at continental, regional, sub-regional and national levels. This is because decisions like these underline that the rule of law protects society鈥檚 right to exercise freedom of expression without fear.
鈥淪uch rulings help to underline the right to expression,鈥 said Berger. 鈥淚n turn, this contributes to enabling a free flow of information as the foundation for truth and progress, and for journalism to be protected in its role of being an antidote to disinformation, hate speech, corruption and human rights violations.鈥