New Zealand Government human rights priorities
New Zealand Government human rights priorities
The key priorities of the New Zealand Government UPR Report are:
• improving the economic, social and cultural wellbeing of people in New Zealand
• reducing violence within families and its impact on women and children
• improving the opportunities and
responsibilities of young people in New Zealand through the
education and youth justice systems
• strengthening the
rights of victims of crime
• improving the
consultation process with civil society for future human
rights reporting and follow-up to
recommendations
• strengthening the partnership between the Government and Māori by continuing to support Māori to realise their potential and continuing the momentum on achieving fair, just and practical settlements of historical claims under the Treaty of Waitangi
• the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and the New Zealand Disability Strategy.
Human Rights Commission
The Commission’s key recommendations
to the New Zealand Government are:
International Obligations
The Commission recommends that government establish
a comprehensive UPR and Treaty body reporting process that
includes engagement with civil society, greater integration
across public agencies, and clearer accountability for
coordinating and publicising reports and following up on
their recommendations.
The Commission recommends that the government should, as a priority, withdraw the remaining reservations to the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
The Commission recommends explicit government
commitment to the full and effective incorporation of
ratified international human rights standards in domestic
legislation, in policy development and in public sector
professional development and
training.
Constitution & Legal Framework
The Commission recommends a review of New
Zealand’s constitutional arrangements to give greater
effect to the Treaty of Waitangi and human rights
protections.
The Commission recommends that the government
should engage with Mäori and the wider community to promote
greater recognition and realisation of indigenous rights as
set out in the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples.
Promotion & Protection of Human
Rights on the Ground
It is recommended that the
government support the Human Rights Commission to develop,
in consultation with all interested parties, a further
national plan of action, for the promotion and protection of
human rights in New Zealand, for 2010 –
2015.
Equality & Non-discrimination
The Commission recommends that in implementing the
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the
government prioritise the rights to education and employment
(establishing targets for participation in the public
sector) and commit to fully accessible public transport by
2020.
The Commission recommends that the government commits to specific targets and timelines for reducing the high levels of imprisonment and the disproportionate number of Māori in prison.
The Commission recommends that the
government establishes targets for improving representation
of women in senior management in the public service, and
sets a minimum target of halving the gender pay gap by 2012
and eliminating it by 2020.
Right to Life,
Liberty & Security of the Person
The Commission
recommends that interventions to reduce violence should be
actively monitored, adjusted and extended on the basis of
robust empirical evidence; and that victims’ rights should
be further strengthened, particularly in relation to
participation in the criminal justice system and access to
compensation.
Right to an Adequate Standard
of Living
The Commission recommends that New Zealand
adopt a national plan to combat poverty with targets and a
timeline and with clear indicators to assess its impact
particularly on children, marginalised groups and Mäori and
Pacific people.
Right to Education
The Commission recommends that the government commit
to fully realising the right to education for all students
by removing remaining barriers to access, participation and
achievement.
Migrants, Refugees and Asylum
Seekers
The Commission recommends that the
government reviews immigration and counter-terrorism
legislation to ensure it is fully compliant with human
rights standards.
Capacity Building &
Technical Assistance
The Commission recommends
that the government ensure that its foreign affairs and
trade policies, as with its international development
assistance policies, incorporate and promote international
human rights standards and that it expand its support for
the protection and promotion of human rights in the
Asia-Pacific
region.
Gordon Campbell: On Pauline Hanson’s Rise, And The TOP Renaissance
New Zealand Alliance Party: Alliance Party Firmly Opposes “Backdoor Privatisation” Of Kiwibank
Taxpayers' Union: New Poll - Coalition Still Ahead; Luxon Regains 'Preferred Prime Minister' Top-Spot
NZ National Party: Judith Collins’ Valedictory Speech
Forest And Bird: Government Biodiversity Credit Scheme Welcomed As Opportunity For Restoration
Office of the Ombudsman: Ombudsman Publishes Findings On Ministry Of Education Sensitive Claims Scheme
Nelson City Council: Mayor Welcomes Auditor-General Decision Not To Prosecute Councillor

