Care for Global Issues : Human Rights, Environmental
Sustainability, Debt Crisis, Peace and Security
Human Rights
1.1 Principles
We believe that it is essential to:
a) ensure that basic human rights are respected in all countries;
b) avoid compromising on human rights for economic or political
expediency;
c) recognise democratic institutions as a fundamental human right;
and
d) work towards the sovereignty and self-determination of entities
with historical, cultural and ecological identity.
1.2 Goals
We will pursue policies that :
a) restrict cooperation with governing regimes that violate human
rights;
b) actively engage with other countries to promote human rights;
c) bring diplomatic and commercial pressures on regimes that violate
human rights, to ensure that they respect the basic rights of their
citizens;
d) keep the interests of disempowered communities foremost in all
dealings with countries in which human rights violations occur;
e) support the end of colonialism and press for resolution of
colonial conflicts through the UN framework;
f) develop a more distinctive and effective role for the
International Court of Justice in the field of human rights; and
g) support, through the UN framework, democratic and economic
reforms in countries coming out of totalitarian control.
Environmental Sustainability
2.1 Principles
We support the conservation of the earth’s environment and its
biodiversity, both as a value in itself and as essential for human
survival and happiness.
2.2 Goals
We will:
a) support international and national moves to halt deforestation in
India as well as the rest of the world and help reforestation; this
involves both cessation of unsustainable logging and more efficient
use of land for human activities by encouraging the reduced
consumption of meat and dairy products, especially in the richer
countries;
b) support international moves to limit land degradation;
c) support international conventions to stop over-fishing in the
oceans;
d) support international moves to reduce pollution of the seas and
the atmosphere;
e) support moves to end trade in hazardous waste;
f) support moves to end exploitation of and trade in endangered
species;
g) support the transfer of environmentally sustainable technologies
to developing countries; and
h) promote the establishment of an Environmental Council at the UN
with similar decision-making powers to the Security Council, but
dealing instead with environmental issues of global significance.
2.3 Short Term Targets
We will support:
a) urgent measures to stop the exploitation of rainforests, which
has resulted in both the loss of a rich biosystem and the
displacement and possible extinction of the native peoples of the
forests;
c) efforts to end the dumping of nuclear waste in the oceans;
d) effective measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and use of
ozone-depleting substances;
e) legislation to require Indian companies, Government agencies and
business enterprises, operating overseas to observe social and
environmental standards no less stringent than those required in
India.
The International Debt Crisis
3.1 Principles
We recognise that repayments of past loans have so outstripped new
loans that the net transfer of money is from the developing world to
the developed.
3.2 Goals
We will intensively lobby to :
a) cancel all debts of developing countries;
b) achieve radical reform of the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund or establish a new international lending institution
that would take over the responsibilities of these institutions, to
be governed by a board with gender balance as well as equal
representation from both developing country debtors and western
lenders; and
c) encourage developing countries to pursue strategies of economic
development which are highly self-reliant and which prioritise the
production of goods and services from local sources.
Peace and Security
4.1 Principles
We are committed to:
a) developing fair and just international relations with other
countries, peoples and regions;
b) building positive peace into our international security
relations;
c) resolving conflict rather than merely deterring war through the
maintenance of traditional military structures;
d) ensuring the greatest possible transparency in India’s foreign
and security relations, domestically and internationally;
e) working with individuals and organisations which openly and
democratically work for such an objective at a local, regional,
national and international level;
f) working towards a framework of sustainable international
relations, strongly supported by nonviolent strategies of
international cooperation, conflict prevention, international
mediation and conflict resolution, and which recognise the local,
national and international dimensions of conflict in our region;
g) capability for the foreseeable future, subject to eventual
regional-wide demilitarisation;
h) reforming the Indian defence forces to ensure that they are
trained and equipped for more sustainable national and international
security roles aimed at ensuring peace; and
i) invisaging an ecologically sustainable post nuclear "New
Intenational Political Order" on the matrix of Civilisational Homes
(like EU) superceding the present nation - state arrangement.
4.2.1 Working towards Regional and Global Demilitarisation.
We will:
a) participate in global regime initiatives to monitor and reduce
the manufacture and export of biological, chemical and nuclear
weapons technologies;
b) support a global nuclear weapons Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT),
with particular reference to nuclear weapons testing in the
Asia-Pacific region;
c) support global nuclear non-proliferation, and comprehensive
measures to dismantle all nuclear weapons and their target systems,
through convening a UN-sponsored International Peace Conference on
general nuclear disarmament;
d) support a global ban on the militarisation of space.
4.2.2 Combating the International Arms Trade and Provision of
Military Assistance.
We will support policies to:
a) ensure that India will not produce weaponry or components for
export;
b) compile a register of all dual-use (civilian-military)
technologies which may be exported from India, and restrict the
trade with reference to a broad range of security considerations
(such as the human rights record of our trading partners);
c) encourage other states to phase out external military aid in the
Asia-Pacific region;
d) end arms trade fairs in India and coordinate with neighbouring
states on similar measures; and
e) establish a realistic, comprehensive register of the arms trade
in the Asia-Pacific region, and work to develop alternative regional
and UN-sponsored disarmament initiatives with a capacity for binding
verification.
4.2.3 Regional Confidence-building and Peace-building
We will support policies that:
a) develop regional security relations which build peace and
confidence, and work towards resolving conflicts before they evolve
into violent international disputes; and
b) recognise that the basis of regional peace and security is a
sustainable framework of human rights protection and promotion, just
and equitable regional trade arrangements, generous and appropriate
overseas aid programme and strong multinational environmental
safeguards; and
c) ensure that the Asia-Pacific states, and their constituent
peoples, have open access to dependable international legal dispute
mechanisms.
4.2.4 Regional Conflict-Prevention
We will encourage:
a) the development of an inter-related set of global security
campaigns through the Ministries of Defence, Foreign Affairs and
Education;
b) effective diplomatic intervention in potential conflict
situations, through India’s network of regional diplomatic ties, and
through regional institutions and the UN where appropriate; and
c) conflict-preventive peacekeeping deployments for interceding in
potential conflict situations, wherever appropriate, in the form of
monitors, police, aid and assistance personnel or peacekeeping
forces, with all-party support managed through relevant regional
organisations or the UN.
4.2.5 Linking Peacebuilding with Peacekeeping and Peacemaking
We will support policies which:
a) manage India’s foreign and security relations in ways which
recognise that peacebuilding and peacemaking are crucial elements of
any regional conflict management framework, and that peacekeeping
has the potential to operate at an interface between the two;
b) develop an integrated strategy linking peacebuilding,
peacekeeping and peacemaking approaches to conflict management;
c) establish an appropriate peacekeeping strategy to be developed
both nationally and through the UN; and
d) respond to the urgent need to comprehensively develop
international peacemaking capabilities, both in new regional
institutions and through a reformed UN.
4.2.6 Sanctions Enforcement Action
We will work to ensure that trade embargoes:
a) are only conducted within a UN mandate;
b) are closely associated with an appropriate strategy of conflict
resolution; and
c) are rigorously enforced in order to achieve their goals as
rapidly as possible.
4.2.7 Military Enforcement Action
We will support a comprehensive strategy of nonviolent conflict
management as the most effective means of promoting peace and
security in the international arena; in which military enforcement
action is only seen as appropriate in securing effective UN
sanctions against states which seriously violate international
peace.
4.2.8 Establishing an Agency for Monitoring Demilitarisation
We will support policies to:
a) establish an agency for monitoring demilitarisation.
l monitoring and/or coordinating regional arms control and
disarmament measures;
l monitoring and combating the arms trade;
l monitoring weapons testing and military exercises;
l coordinating regional arms conversion strategies;
b) develop a culture of nonviolent conflict management and peace
education throughout the world.
The changes discussed above for making developmental policies more
useful need to be implemented with the support and endorsement from
the Government of India as well as the State Governments.