Pretoria Declaration on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Africa
Pretoria
Declaration on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Africa (2004)
Preamble
Recalling
that the African
Charter enshrines economic, social and cultural rights, in particular in its
article 14, article 15, article 16, article 17, article 18, article 21 and
article 22;
Recognising
the existence of
regional and international human rights standards that stress the
indivisibility, interdependence and universality of all human rights. Among
these are the African Charter, the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of
the Child, the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on
the Rights of Women in Africa, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
Declaration on the Right to Development, the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the Convention
for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women;
Recognising
also that the
objectives and principles of the Constitutive Act include a commitment to the
promotion and protection human and peoples’ rights, respect for democratic
principles, human rights, the rule of law and good governance and the promotion
of social justice to ensure balanced economic development;
Noting that despite the consensus on the
indivisibility of human rights, economic, social and cultural rights remain
marginalised in their implementation;
Concerned
that there is
resistance to recognising economic, social and cultural rights that results in
the continued marginalisation of these rights, which excludes the majority of
Africans from the enjoyment of human rights;
Appreciating
the positive impact
that information and communication technologies (ICTs) can have on the
promotion, protection and realisation of economic, social and cultural rights;
Recognising
that there are several
constraints that preclude the full realisation of economic, social and cultural
rights in Africa;
Deeply
disturbed by the
ongoing and longstanding conflicts in the regions of Africa, which impede the
realisation of economic, social and cultural rights;
Adopted at
a seminar in Pretoria, South Africa in September 2004 at which representatives
of the Commission, 12 African states, national human rights institutions and
NGOs participated. The Declaration was adopted by the Commission at its 36th
session in December 2004.
Concerned
further by the lack
of human security in Africa due to the prevailing conditions of poverty and
under-development and the failure to address poverty through development;
Further
recognising the
urgent need for human rights, judicial and administrative institutions in
Africa to promote human dignity based on equality and to tackle the core human
rights issues facing Africans including, food security, sustainable
livelihoods, human survival and the prevention of violence;
The participants
state that:
1. States
parties to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights have solemnly
undertaken to respect, protect, promote and fulfil all the rights in the
Charter including economic, social and cultural rights.
2. By doing
so, states parties have agreed to adopt legislative and other measures,
individually or through international co-operation and assistance, to give full
effect to the economic, social and cultural rights contained in the African
Charter, by using the maximum of their resources. States parties have an
obligation to ensure the satisfaction of, at the very least, the minimum essential
levels of each of the economic, social and cultural rights contained in the
African Charter.
3. States
are therefore called upon to address with all appropriate measures their
obligations in relation to the full realisation of economic, social and
cultural rights as well as tackling the following constraints:
- Lack of
good governance and planning and failure to allocate sufficient resources for
implementation of economic, social and cultural rights;
- Lack of
political will;
- Corruption, misuse and misdirection of financial resources;
- Poor
utilisation of human resources and absence of effective measures to curtail
brain drain;
- Failure
to ensure equitable distribution of income from natural resources;
- Trafficking in women and children;
- Continued
outflow and existence of refugees and internally displaced persons;
- Illiteracy and lack of awareness,
- Conditionality of aid and unserviceable debt burdens,
- Privatisation of essential services
- Cost
recovery including access fees and charges for essential services;
- Lack of
support for and recognition of the work of civil society organisations;
- Lack of
implementation of obligations assumed under international law into national
law,
- Under
development of social amenities;
- Limited
engagement with human rights on the part of some judges;
- Lack of
protection of African indigenous knowledge;
- Failure
to enforce some judicial decisions against the state;
- The
adverse effects of globalisation.
4. States
parties have also undertaken to eliminate all forms of discrimination,
including all forms of discrimination against women, and to promote the equal
enjoyment of all human rights. Non-discrimination and equal treatment are the
key components of economic, social and cultural rights since vulnerable and
marginal groups including refugees and internally displaced persons are
disproportionately affected by a failure of the state to respect, protect and
fulfill these rights.
5. The
right to property in article 14 of the Charter relating to land and housing
entails among other things the following:
-
Protection from arbitrary deprivation of property;
- Equitable
and non-discriminatory access, acquisition, ownership, inheritance and control
of land and housing, especially by women;
- Adequate
compensation for public acquisition, nationalisation or expropriation;
- Equitable
and non-discriminatory access to affordable loans for the acquisition of property;
- Equitable
redistribution of land through due process of law to redress historical and
gender injustices;
- Recognition and protection of lands belonging to indigenous communities;
- Peaceful
enjoyment of property and protection from arbitrary eviction;
- Equal
access to housing and to acceptable living conditions in a healthy environment.
6. The
right to work in article 15 of the Charter entails among other things the
following:
- Equality
of opportunity of access to gainful work, including access for refugees,
disabled and other disadvantaged persons;
- Conducive
investment environment for the private sector to participate in creating
gainful work;
- Effective
and enhanced protections for women in the workplace including parental leave;
- Fair
remuneration, a minimum living wage for labour, and equal remuneration for work
of equal value;
- Equitable
and satisfactory conditions of work, including effective and accessible
remedies for work place-related injuries, hazards and accidents;
- Creation
of enabling conditions and taking measures to promote the rights and
opportunities of those in the informal sector, including in subsistence
agriculture and in small scale enterprises activities;
- Promotion
and protection of equitable and satisfactory conditions of work of women
engaged in household labour;
- The right
to freedom of association, including the rights to collective bargaining,
strike and other related trade union rights;
- Prohibition against forced labour and economic exploitation of children, and
other vulnerable persons;
- The right
to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours, periodic
holidays with pay and remuneration for public holidays.
7. The
right to health in article 16 of the Charter entails among other things the
following:
- Availability of accessible and affordable health facilities, goods and services
of reasonable quality for all;
- Access to
the minimum essential food which is nutritionally adequate and safe to ensure
freedom from hunger to everyone and to prevent malnutrition;
- Access to
basic shelter, housing and sanitation and adequate supply of safe and potable
water;
- Access to
reproductive, maternal and child health care based on the life cycle approach
to health;
- Immunisation against major infectious diseases;
- Education, prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and
other major killer diseases;
- Education
and access to information concerning the main health problems in the community
including methods of preventing and controlling them;
- Training
for health personnel including education on health and human rights;
- Access to
humane and dignified care of the elderly and for persons with mental and
physical disabilities;
8. The
right to education in article 17 of the African Charter entails among other
things the following:
- Provision
of free and compulsory basic education that will also include a programme in
psycho-social education for orphans and vulnerable children;
- Provision
of special schools and facilities for physically and mentally disabled
children;
- Access to
affordable secondary and higher education;
- Accessible and affordable vocational training and adult education;
- Addressing social, economic and cultural practices and attitudes that hinder
access to education by girl children;
- Availability of educational institutions that are physically and economically
accessible to everyone;
- Development of curricula that address diverse social, economic and cultural
settings and which inculcate human rights norms and values for responsible
citizens;
- Liberty
of parents and guardians to choose for their children schools, other than those
established by the public authorities, which conform to such minimum
educational standards as may be laid down by the state, and to ensure the
religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own
convictions;
- Continued
education for teachers and instructors including education on human rights and
the continuous improvement of the conditions of work of teaching staff;
- Education
for development that links school curricula to the labour market and society’s
demands for technology and self-reliance.
9. The
right to culture in articles 17 and 18 of the African Charter entail among
other things the following:
- Positive African
values consistent with international human rights realities and standards;
- Eradication of harmful traditional practices that negatively affect human
rights;
- Participation at all levels in the determination of cultural policies and in
cultural and artistic activities;
- Measures
for safeguarding, protecting and building awareness of tangible and intangible
cultural heritage, including traditional knowledge systems;
- Recognition and respect of the diverse cultures existing in Africa;
10. The social,
economic and cultural rights explicitly provided for under the African Charter,
read together with other rights in the Charter, such as the right to life and
respect for inherent human dignity, imply the recognition of other economic and
social rights, including the right to shelter, the right to basic nutrition and
the right to social security.
11. Having
highlighted the core contents of economic, social and cultural rights under the
African Charter, participants make the following recommendations:
(a) States
parties should:
- Ratify,
if they have not done so, the treaties mentioned in the Preamble, especially
the Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa;
- Incorporate into domestic law and fully
implement the provisions of regional and international treaties on economic,
social and cultural rights;
- Establish constitutional protection of economic, social and cultural rights
subject to non-discrimination and equality;
- Come
up with National Action Plans, which set out benchmark indicators for the
progressive realisation of social economic and cultural rights;
- Take
effective measure to ensure budgetary processes are transparent and
consultative;
- Involve civil society in meaningful consultations in policymaking and in the
implementation of economic, social and cultural rights generally;
- Review all national policies, which undermine the realisation of specific
economic, social and cultural rights;
- Provide reports under article 62 of the Charter on how far they have gone in
making economic, social and cultural rights both accessible and non discriminatory;
- Adopt
measures for the prudent use of resources, including the investigation of
affordable alternatives for health drugs e.g. generic vs. patent medicines
- Ensure
effective citizen participation in government through credible electoral
processes, liberalisation of the mass media and in the formulation of
legislation and policies;
- Adopt
special measures for women and address the economic, social and cultural rights
of vulnerable and marginalised groups including children, indigenous peoples,
displaced persons, refugees, persons living with HIV/AIDS and the disabled;
- Develop mechanisms to hold non-state actors especially multi-national corporations
and businesses accountable for violations of economic, social and cultural
rights in such matters relating to child labour, industrial safety standards,
protection against forced evictions and low wages, protection of the
environment, including global warming and its impact on ecosystems, livelihood
and food security;
- Strengthen the capacity of state institutions to produce disaggregate data that
would provide an accurate assessment of the implementation of economic, social
and cultural rights;
- Promulgate and implement comprehensive ICT policies and programmes;
- Consult with civil society organisations in the nomination and election of
members of the African Commission and judges of the African Court;
- Ratify the Protocol on the African Human Rights Court and make the declaration
under article 34(6) of the Protocol allowing individuals and nongovernmental organisations
to file cases, if they have not done so;
- Nominate and elect judges of the African Human Rights Court so that it may be established
without further delay;
- Take necessary measures to reduce military spending significantly in favour of
increasing spending on the implementation of economic, social and cultural
rights;
- Ensure that economic, social and cultural rights take primacy in the negotiations
of bilateral and multilateral trade and economic agreements;
- Create
independent, impartial and well-resourced national human rights institutions
and if they already exist to strengthen their independence and impartiality.
(b) The
African Union should:
- Urge
member states that have not done so, to ratify the human rights treaties
mentioned in the Preamble, in particular the Protocol on the Rights of Women in
Africa;
- Provide sufficient funds for African human rights institutions to enable them
to effectively fulfil their mandate;
- Establish the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights without further delay;
- Urge
member states that have not done so to ratify the Protocol to the African
Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Establishment of the African Court
on Human and Peoples’ Rights, and to make the necessary declaration under
article 34(6) of the Protocol;
- Establish the Human Rights Fund as recommended by the First AU Ministerial
Conference on Human Rights held in Kigali, Rwanda, in May 2003;
- Strengthen the Secretariat to enhance the functioning of the African Commission;
- Urge
the AU Peace and Security Council to adopt urgent measures to address the
conflicts in Africa in order to create a conducive environment for the respect
of economic, social and cultural rights;
- Call
upon the organs of the AU to encourage member states to uphold economic, social
and cultural rights and to hold them accountable for violations of economic,
social and cultural rights;
- Integrate the monitoring of economic, social and cultural rights into the work
of relevant AU institutions as well as the CSSDCA Peer Review Mechanism and New
Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) African Peer Review Mechanism
process;
- Follow
up recommendations of the African Commission to ensure implementation of its
decisions by member states.
(c) The
African Commission should:
- Elaborate principles and guidelines on economic, social and cultural rights and
establish a working group for this purpose;
- Integrate economic, social and cultural rights into the mandates of existing
Special Rapporteurs and Working Groups;
- Urge
states to duly submit their reports to the African Commission under article 62
of the African Charter;
- Address economic, social and cultural rights during the examination of State
Reports under article 62 during questions and concluding observations;
- Review
its guidelines for state reporting pertaining to economic, social and cultural
rights;
- Consider alternative means of examining implementation of provisions of the
Charter by a state that is in perpetual default of its reporting obligations
under article 62 of the Charter.
- Provide substantive recommendations to the AU Assembly on economic, social and
cultural rights;
- Undertake studies and research under article 45 on specific economic, social
and cultural rights;
- Pay
special attention to economic, social and cultural rights during promotional
visits to states;
- Ensure
effective dissemination of relevant decisions and resolutions of the Commission
in collaboration with relevant governmental and nongovernmental national and
sub-regional institutions;
- Further elaborate the economic and social rights implicit in the African Charter;
- Urge
the AU to establish the African Human Rights Court without further delay and
those states that have not done so, to ratify the Protocol establishing the
Court and to make the necessary declaration under article 34(6) of the
Protocol.
(d) Civil
Society should:
- Play a
more pro-active role in the nomination of and lobby for the election of
candidates to the African Commission who are conversant with economic, social
and cultural rights;
- Advocate for states to ratify the Protocol of the African Human Rights Court
and to make the declaration allowing NGOs and individuals to file cases;
- Advocate for the African Human Rights Court to be established without further
delay;
- Prioritise monitoring of economic, social and cultural rights in their advocacy
work;
- Play a
role in raising public awareness of economic, social and cultural rights and
the obstacles to fulfilment of these rights in particular harmful cultural
practices;
- Actively participate in the budgetary process, both in terms of formulation and
analysis;
- Develop partnerships with both the state and private sector, where possible,
for the protection of economic, social and cultural rights;
- Compile and submit to the African Commission shadow reports on economic, social
and cultural rights;
- Improve networking amongst NGOs and their support activities of the African
Commission and its Special Rapporteurs and Working Groups;
- Bring
more cases on economic, social and cultural rights to the African Commission,
the African Committee on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, national courts,
and the African Human Rights Court, when it is established;
- Become
involved in specific projects in the implementation of economic, social and
cultural rights especially in the rural areas;
- Advocate for comprehensive national and regional ICT policies and programmes,
and to incorporate ICT training, provision and access in their work plans.
(e)
National Human Rights Institutions should:
- Undertake studies, monitor and report on economic, social and cultural rights;
- Scrutinise existing laws and administrative acts and make submissions to
Parliament on bills relating to economic, social and cultural rights;
- Publish and distribute their reports on economic, social and cultural rights;
- Establish regional networks /coalitions and involve NGOs in these coalitions;
- Apply
for affiliate status with the African Commission, if they have not done so;
- Raise
awareness on economic, social and cultural rights among particular groups such
as the public service, the judiciary, the private sector and the labour
movement and encourage the Government to integrate human rights in the school
curricula;
- Examine complaints of infringements of economic, social and cultural rights and
make recommendations on redress, and where possible file cases before national
courts;
- Conduct follow up activities in the implementation of recommendations of
international treaty bodies and publicise their reports, especially on
economic, social and cultural rights;
- Advocate for states to ratify the Protocol of the African Human Rights Court
and to make the declaration allowing NGOs and individuals to file cases;
- Advocate for the African Human Rights Court to be established without further
delay;
(f)
International and regional entities should:
- Pay
particular attention to African needs related to development and the
realisation of economic, social and cultural rights;
- Cancel
the unserviceable debt burdens of African states;
- Ensure that bilateral and multilateral trade and economic agreements conform to
international treaty obligations relating to economic, social and cultural
rights;
- Play a role in the implementation of economic, social and cultural rights including
through assistance and co-operation with African states;
- Take measures to regulate trade in extractive industries (such as oil, mining) that
are exploitative, corrupt and fuel conflicts in Africa;
- Co-operate with African countries in their efforts to repatriate money and
cultural artefacts that have been unlawfully removed from African countries;
- Ensure compliance with the principles of corporate social responsibility.
12. In conclusion, the African Union, its member states, international and national
organisations and non-state actors should fully recognise human rights as a
fundamental objective of development and that development has to achieve the
full realisation of all human rights. Economic, social and cultural rights
should therefore be integrated into development planning and implementation so
that African needs and aspirations are fully addressed.