Frontlines and Frontiers: Making Human Rights a Human Reality
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Dublin City University
Dublin, Ireland
December 6, 2012
Thank
you. Thank you. Good afternoon. It is wonderful to be here at DCU and
back in Dublin. I want to thank you, President MacCraith, for that kind
introduction. I’m delighted to be joined here by a number of officials
and dignitaries, including your Chancellor, Martin McAleese, whom I have
had the pleasure of meeting before when he was the spouse of a
president. (Laughter.) We had a lot in common. I was once a spouse of a
president as well. Your Minister for Education, Minister Quinn; your
Minister for Children and Youth Fitzgerald; your Minister for Social
Protection Burton, and the Lord Mayor of Dublin – we are grateful to
have all of you here, but I’m particularly pleased there are so many
students and young people here in this auditorium.
This university
is renowned, not just for your world-class academics but also your
engagement with in the world – your international student body, your
commitment to help solve urgent global problems through study and
innovation, and your new Institute for International Conflict Resolution
and Reconstruction, which I can assure you will have a busy agenda
ahead of it. Because you are absolutely right that the lessons learned
here in Ireland about how to build peace could be of great use to other
peoples and nations. And I commend the university for your global
service, which has such ramifications far beyond the academic world.
Now,
it goes without saying that for millions of Americans who have family
ties to Ireland, including my husband and daughter, and President Obama,
this nation is often seen as a second homeland. And over the years,
Ireland has made enormous contributions to America’s progress. Several
of the people who signed the Declaration of Independence were born in
Ireland, as were many of the soldiers who fought in our revolution. The
Irish helped build America’s canals and railroads, overcame suspicion
and bigotry to earn their livings and educate their children, and rose
over time to become leaders in every field of endeavor.
Now,
people around the world often speak of and believed in the American
dream, but I think it is fair to say that no people have done more to
build that dream and make it real than the Irish. The United States, my
country, would not be the country it is today were it not for this
nation and its people. And that close kinship, not just a relationship
between nations and governments, but a friendship rooted in
relationships between people, is as strong as ever.
Ireland and
the United States work side by side to fight global hunger, to prevent
the kind of suffering that Ireland endured during the Great Famine. We
are helping women across the world, particularly in Malawi, gain access
to clean cookstoves. We’re working together in Afghanistan to try to
make long-term stability possible for a people that has known very
little of that. And Ireland has shown an unsurpassed commitment to
preventing war by protecting peace. It’s an astonishing fact, but for
more than 50 years, not a single day has gone by in which an Irish
peacekeeper has not stood a post somewhere in the world.
So I know
that Ireland is going through hard times now. I understand the painful
sacrifice that so many families have had to make. But I want you to know
that, not just in the United States, but people everywhere look to
Ireland and see a resilient nation. Yes, a generous nation, one
dedicated to peace and justice because you know from your own history
how precious that is and how important it is for all of us to stand up
for those values and protect them. And it is that struggle that joins
our two countries, on behalf of human dignity and freedom, that brings
me here today.
This is likely to be my last official visit to
Ireland as the United States Secretary of State. And I want to mark this
occasion by speaking with you about a foreign policy priority that
represents our two nations’ most cherished values, and which is central
to how we confront the world’s challenges – human rights.
Now,
human rights don’t always occupy the headlines, but they are often what
lie just behind and underneath them. And the future that awaits the
students and young people today will be shaped, in large part, by how
well leaders live up to their human rights responsibilities.
During
my first year as Secretary, I celebrated Human Rights Day by giving a
speech at a university, Georgetown, in Washington, DC. I said there and
then that in the 21st century, America’s goal must be to make human rights a human reality, building upon what was accomplished in the 20th
century, through the heroic efforts of leaders like Eleanor Roosevelt
and many others, when the international community established human
rights as the God-given entitlement of every person, and embedded those
rights into international law along with governments’ responsibilities
to protect them.
So I’m often asked, where do human rights fit
into American foreign policy? Now, there are some – they’ve often been
called idealists – who say that when we tackle foreign policy
challenges, we should be governed first and foremost by the end goal of
advancing our values, because that is how you build a better world.
There
are others – they’ve been called realists – who point out that ideals
are not always easily reconciled in a world where bad actors exist and
bad things happen. And therefore, shorter-term interests must be given
more weight in the here and now.
This has been and will remain a
difficult debate. There happens to be merits on both sides. It is
certainly true that the last decade has driven home the very real
threats that exist to security and stability worldwide. And part of my
responsibility as Secretary of State is to work to counter those
threats. And furthermore, many of the challenges we face, from getting
the global economy back on track to preventing terrorism, are becoming
more complex by the day.
But at the same time, one must never
forget universal values are vital to who we are and what we hope to see
our world become. And they are American values and Irish values; I would
argue they are everyone’s values. They certainly are part of who we are
as Americans, not only a commitment that is central to our identity but
also a source of our influence in the world.
So the real
challenge, not just for decision-makers but citizens as well, is to be
clear-headed about the world as it is and the tough choices it presents
on a daily basis, while remembering that human rights are at the center
of some of the most significant challenges to global security and
stability and therefore to our national interests.
That’s why I
don’t mind I’ve been called both an idealist and a realist. In reality, I
think we all need to be more of a hybrid, perhaps idealistic realists.
Because leading effectively cannot be done without our values. And a
great deal of what is happening today bears that out.
It is not a
coincidence that virtually every country that threatens regional and
global peace is a place where human rights are in peril. The genius of
the Helsinki Final Act is the insight that human rights and security are
indivisible. That insight, present since its founding in 1975, is what
sets the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe apart as a
regional organization.
And of course, it is why I’m here in Dublin
today, because the Irish Government is the chair in office and hosting
the annual meeting. That organization and its founding documents were
revolutionary. They recognized that the human rights situation in one
country impacts the security of the entire region around it.
And
yet, even leaders in countries that secure human rights for their people
don’t always see advancing human rights elsewhere as a foreign policy
priority. They look around the world – and especially today, we know so
much because of the 24/7 information environment in which we exist –
that when we see so many urgent challenges competing for attention, it’s
easy to think, “Let’s postpone action on human rights until after we
deal with these other matters.”
But human rights cannot be
disconnected from other priorities. They are inextricably linked with
all of the goals we strive for in our countries and around the world.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is not just a catalog of
rights and government obligations. It is a time-tested blueprint for
successful societies.
Today, I want to talk about four frontlines
of human rights, issues over which fierce battles are being fought,
where the stakes are high and our leadership, from both the United
States and the Republic of Ireland, is urgently needed. My argument will
be that these human rights battles implicate both our values and our
interests – and that they take place at the heart of the great
geopolitical challenges of our time, not in some separate and distinct
sphere set apart from the real, hard stuff going on in the world.
The
first frontline is religious freedom and the rights of religious
minorities. Amid the uncertainty of unfolding transitions to democracy,
old hatreds flare anew, particularly toward members of minority groups.
And in many places in the past year, we’ve seen religious minorities
become targets. In fact, members of faith communities have been under
pressure for a long time and they report that the pressure is rising.
That threatens not only the religious minorities themselves, but the
futures of their societies because a society can and should be judged,
in part, by how it protects the rights of its minorities. Societies are
strongest when they deliver justice not just for the powerful, but also
for the vulnerable. And while religious freedom is a human right unto
itself, this issue is about other rights, too – the right of people to
think what they want, say what they think, associate with others, and
assemble peacefully without the state looking over their shoulders or
prohibiting them from doing so.
In the Middle East and North
Africa, as in other places in the midst of transitions, like Burma, the
United States and the world have an interest in seeing new governments
build the institutions and legal foundations they need to achieve
lasting stability internally and to be constructive partners
internationally. In other words, we want those transitions to go well.
And religious freedom is just one example of how human rights are at the
center of meeting that challenge.
So at this pivotal moment, the
United States has conveyed to countries in transition the importance of
locking in protections for the human rights of religious minorities, to
lay the groundwork for democracies that will endure. We’ve reached out
to religious minorities. We meet with them at their places of worship
and in their homes so we can better understand the challenges they face
as we elevate religious freedom both in international settings and
bilateral diplomacy.
Now, of course, religious freedom is only one
part of a successful transition to democracy. We have been watching the
events unfolding in Cairo with growing concern. Almost two years ago,
the Egyptian people, primarily young people, took to the streets because
they wanted real democratic change. And they deserve a constitution
that protects the rights of all Egyptians, men and women, Muslim and
Christian, and ensures that Egypt will uphold all of its international
obligations. They also deserve a constitutional process that is open,
transparent, and fair.
The upheaval we are seeing once again in
the streets of Cairo and other cities indicates that dialogue is
urgently needed. And we call on all the stakeholders in Egypt to settle
their differences through discussion and debate, not through violence.
And we call on Egypt’s leaders to ensure that the outcome protects the
democratic promise of the revolution for all Egyptians.
Let me
turn to the second frontline, Internet freedom. Now, if I were here 10
years ago giving a speech, I’m not sure that would have been in my top
four frontlines. But look at what a difference a decade has made. Our
commitment to internet freedom as a human rights issue intersects with
our interest in seeing emerging powers rise in a way that tends toward
sustainable economic growth and long-term stability.
From China
and Russia to emerging democratic powers like India, Brazil, and
Indonesia, part of what will determine the trajectory of those countries
is how they choose to respond to the questions their own citizens are
raising about what kind of future they want, about governance issues
that affect their everyday lives, like food safety or pollution, about
how corruption undermines the public trust.
So the United States
believes that it is in the interest of all governments to respond to
criticism, not repress it. I learned many years ago, being involved in
politics, that as hard as it is, one must learn to take criticism
seriously but not personally, figuring out what it is you are being told
that maybe you could learn from. Not all criticism is legitimate; some
of it is motivated by less than noble reasons, but oftentimes your
critic can turn out to be your best friend.
A free and open debate
about real issues presents governments with opportunities and ideas for
reform, if they’re willing to accept them. And those reforms, in turn,
can help reinforce economic and political stability. Democratic
countries have the institutions and processes to respond constructively
to critics, and then to adapt to a changing world.
On the other
hand, cracking down on critics who say something you don’t like – and
believe me when you’re in government, nearly every hour someone says
something that you won’t like – but cracking down on those critics
starts a spiral. As governments violate their citizens’ rights more and
more, they face more and more criticism and then more and more
temptation to double-down on the politics of repression. The only escape
from this downward spiral is to stop violations and start reform.
So
Internet freedom is central here, because these days, the place where
many discussions and debates are happening is online. The Internet is
the public space of the 21st century. As the Internet has
grown, and as citizens turn to it to conduct important aspects of their
lives, repressive governments have worked harder and harder to limit
people’s freedom online, just as they do offline. They are scrubbing
websites of facts or ideas that challenge their hold on power. They are
censoring emails and rerouting web traffic. They’re reading political
blogs, then showing up at the homes of bloggers and arresting them.
They’re monitoring the emails of political dissidents in order to track
their movements and identify their associates. The rights of individuals
to express their views, petition their leaders, freely associate with
others are universal, whether they are exercised on a university campus
or a university’s Facebook page. Freedom is freedom, online or off.
Now,
some emerging powers have sought to use the advent of the Internet as
an excuse to ignore or revise established international standards. But
the arrival of new technologies does not change each person’s
entitlement to that person’s human rights. We need to protect human
rights online and hold governments accountable when they violate those
rights, just as we should seek to hold violators accountable in the
offline world. Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
is 64 years old, but it seems remarkably prophetic in protecting the
right to – and I quote – “seek, receive, and impart information by any
medium, regardless of frontiers.”
So we are working in the State
Department with the private sector, multilateral organizations, and
civil society to expose abuses and reinforce that the same rights apply
offline as well as on. We’re also supporting Internet freedom from
another angle by funding technologies, tools, and training to help
digital activists who live and work in repressive environments. And we
are investing in innovation, because we know that governments on the
other side of this fight are constantly improving their methods of
oppression, and we intend to stay ahead of them. By the end of this
year, the United States will have invested $100 million to help ensure
that people in repressive internet environments can exercise their
rights more safely and reliably.
The third frontline is the role
of civil society, the activists, organizations, congregations,
journalists, and citizens who work through peaceful means to solve
problems and encourage their governments to do better. Civil society is
important everywhere, including in our countries. But nowhere is it more
vital than in those states whose futures are unsure.
Some are
young democracies, where the challenge is to lock in gains so that, for
example, we don’t see a repeat of what has happened in Mali. Others are
countries that are in a kind of limbo, where citizens and maybe even
some in government are struggling to get their country on the path to
rights-respecting democracy. And then there are places where small
cracks exist under authoritarian governments and where there is an
opportunity to pry them open and try to build something better.
In
all of these places – we call them “states in the balance” – we both
have an economic and security interest in having the balance tilt toward
accountable institutions with protections for human rights, rule of
law, democratic governance. If things tilt the other way, it limits the
economic potential of new markets, can increase regional instability,
and undermine efforts to combat transnational crime and terrorism.
Now,
we recognize that our ability to directly influence political reforms
and institution building from the outside in a lasting way is limited.
We know that durable change is most likely to come from within, and that
it takes everyone – journalists and activists, business people and
teachers, religious leaders and labor leaders – pointing out the need
for change, providing the ideas for change, and then reinforcing and
supporting the political actions that will produce change.
That’s
what civil society does. It is the underpinning of a free and
functioning country. And unfortunately, this is a dangerous moment,
because the trend of governments cracking down on civil society is on
the rise. This morning at the OSCE, I pointed out examples of this
happening here in Europe and Eurasia. I could make a similar list for
every region.
Civil society is a target because it is, by its very
nature, an organized threat to governmental oppression. It gives
citizens a way to improve their lives without government direction or
permission. It brings people together around a shared mission, and there
are few things repressive governments fear more than citizens banding
together with a common purpose. And it reflects a belief that people do
not exist to serve their governments, rather, governments exist to serve
their people.
Many members of civil society advocate on behalf of
their fellow citizens at great personal risk. Activists and journalists
are blackmailed, even murdered. Land activists face threats or are
thrown in jail. Religious leaders who counsel tolerance can face
repercussions, even from their own believers. And people who make the
case against any vulnerable group need the support of civil society.
It’s
very true that many governments attempt to squeeze civil society in a
steel vise, and we are seeing a particular movement against the LGBT
community around the world, punishing people, harassing them, beating
them, imprisoning them for who they are. So the United States has
targeted our efforts to preserve the space that civil society and
vulnerable people need to make the case for change in their own
communities.
We currently are providing emergency support to
dozens of individual human rights activists around the world, who run
into trouble because of their work. And the United States has created a
fund – to which more than a dozen governments and two private
foundations have contributed – to support embattled NGOs with legal
representation, communication technologies like cell phones and internet
access, and other forms of quick support. We just brought out of
eastern Congo to safety an incredibly courageous doctor who has cared
for so many of the women and girls who have been brutally assaulted over
the course of the many years of the conflict in the eastern Congo, who
found himself being targeted and watching members of his staff be killed
in front of his eyes, and we were able to bring him to safety. But
think of how many people need this help right now, somewhere in the
world.
In many places we’re also working with USAID and other
donors to help civil society actors build the skills they need to do
their work effectively, documenting abuses, storing data, learning how
to deal with the media. We welcome them into our embassies both because
we want their advice but also because we can sometimes help them by
introducing them to members of the government or the private sector, or
even other NGOs who are working in related areas. And we’ve launched a
Strategic Dialogue with Civil Society to send a signal about the
importance we attach to these relationships as part of our foreign
policy.
I can remember so well when I was First Lady, and I was
visiting Guatemala, and I was introduced to a woman who had been an
activist on behalf of indigenous people and had suffered greatly trying
to prevent abuses against people who were defenseless against private
militias or the government’s armies. And when I met her, I asked her, as
I often do around the world, if there was something I could do for her.
And she said, “Yes, I understand you’ll be speaking to the parliament
later today.” I said, “That’s right.” She said, “If you will mention my
name, you could help save my life, because if people know that there is
somebody in the United States who knows about my work, maybe they will
leave me alone to continue that work.” So never underestimate what any
of us can and should do to support these courageous civil society
activists on environmental climate change front, on the protection of
minorities, on fighting for health care, on standing up against
corruption, on doing what they know is best for their people and society
but which is rejected by elites and governments afraid to cede one
ounce of their power.
The fourth and final frontline I would
mention today is the ultimate blend of idealism and realism – respecting
the human rights of women and girls. I believe this is the unfinished
business of the 21st century. It is just foolish to try and
build a strong economy or a stable democracy while treating half the
population as second-class citizens at best, as some other species at
worst. And yet in too many places, that’s exactly what women are
treated. They have few or no political rights. They are subjected to
terrible violence. Their health, even their lives are disregarded. They
are forced into marriage or forced labor as if they were property
instead of people.
I personally have no doubt that if women
everywhere were treated as equal to men in rights and dignity, we would
see economic and political progress come to places that are now
teetering on the edge. We would not only see a decrease in violence and a
rise in good governance in volatile places, but we would see increased
economic growth at a time when the world desperately needs more growth.
The World Bank has finished a remarkable set of studies demonstrating
how removing the obstacles the women’s full participation in the economy
everywhere, including in my own country, would increase the world’s GDP
at a time when we know we need it. The world would be more prosperous
and more stable.
One of the first things I did as Secretary was to
elevate the Office of Global Women’s Issues by appointing the first
ever Ambassador at Large to take the lead on identifying concrete ways
the United States could work to secure the human rights of women
worldwide. We see this as a moral imperative and a high-reward
political, economic, and security strategy. We led the charge for the
implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1325, the first ever to
recognize the role of women in restoring peace and maintaining
security. We created a National Action Plan and encouraged others to do
the same. I highly recommend a documentary movie about ending the
terrible war in Liberia, called “Pray the Devil Back to Hell,” which is
just one example of what women have done to end conflict and to begin a
political transition, which led, in that case, to the election of the
first woman president on the African continent.
Now we recognize,
of course, that women’s political participation matters not only when
tackling the worst challenges of conflict and violence, but also when
finding solutions for more everyday governance problems at the village
and community level, in national parliaments and ministries. That’s why
we’ve repeatedly urged leaders to lay the legal and constitutional
groundwork to enable women to make their contributions to societies in
transition in the Middle East and elsewhere.
Because so much
violence against women and girls takes place within their homes and
communities, and often in the form of harmful traditional practices like
female genital mutilation and so-called “honor crimes,” we’ve launched
the first U.S. Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence
Globally. One of our top priorities is eliminating child marriage.
Beginning next year, the State Department will track every country’s
legal minimum age of marriage and the rate of marriage for underage
girls and boys.
And today, I am pleased to announce we are
developing a new initiative to provide emergency support to survivors of
gender-based violence, those under credible threat of imminent attack
due to their gender, and organizations that may need protection. All of
us were moved by the story of the young Pakistani girl, Malala, who was
targeted by the Taliban for the effrontery for going to school – more
than that, speaking out for the rights of girls in Pakistan to go to
school. She was miraculously spared from being literally shot in the
face and is making what appears to be an excellent recovery.
For
every young woman whose name comes to our attention, there are countless
others who suffer in silence, who face cultural and social and
religious barriers to their human rights and dignity. We want to include
every country in our outreach, and we also wish to reach women with
disabilities, some of whom have been afflicted as a result of
gender-based violence – the acid attacks, the shootings, the torture –
and to send a message that these girls are valuable, valuable to
families and valuable to societies.
As the mother of a daughter,
and as someone who believes strongly in the right of every person, male
and female, to have the opportunity to live up to his or her God-given
potential, it pains me so greatly when I travel to places around the
world and am received almost as an exception to the rule, where the male
leaders meet with me because I am the Secretary of State of the United
States, overlooking the fact that I also happen to be a woman. We are on
the right side of history in this struggle, but there will be many
sacrifices and losses until we finally reach a point where daughters are
valued as sons, where girls as educated as boys, where women are
encouraged and permitted to make their contributions to their families,
to their societies just as the men are.
We have also done a great
deal of work to refocus our global health programs so that we save the
lives and improve the health of more women and girls. Health programs,
as you know, can be imbalanced, often in ways that are not obvious, but
the result is women and girls don’t get the care they need when they
need it, and many die unnecessarily. So our starting point must be this:
Women’s lives matter. And promoting the human rights of women begins
with saving the lives of women whenever we can.
The frontlines
I’ve discussed today do not constitute, by any means, an exhaustive
list. A speech that did would go on, literally, for days. And human
rights are at the center of many other challenges we face – like
security on the Korean peninsula, which runs some of the largest
concentration camps in the world; the threat to international peace
posed by Iran. And one of the frontlines is ensuring that rights
protections apply to everyone, which is why the Obama Administration
supports the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and
we hope that we will be able, perhaps next year, to join others in
signing that treaty and acceding to it. We’ve also joined with South
Africa and others to affirm the human rights of LGBT people.
So
today, I’ve shared just a few examples of the way human rights are
central to how we are thinking about foreign policy and national
security. The question in everyone’s mind should not be, “Why does a
government focus on human rights?” but, “Why don’t all governments do
the same?” Because if you say you believe in human rights, but
demonstrate no concern for it beyond your borders, that is a very feeble
form of belief. And if you are truly representing your citizens, you
cannot do so effectively in the 21st century without
recognizing that human rights must remain a central goal of those of us
who believe in the dignity of every person.
But I don’t want to
mislead anyone. The work I’ve described is incredibly difficult.
Commitment to these rights has to take root and grow within people’s
hearts and minds, and that takes time. But I would argue that those of
us lucky enough to live in countries like the United States and Ireland
have a double responsibility, first, to remain vigilant in ensuring that
we honor and implement our own commitment to human rights at home, and
second, to help others gain what we have, the chance to live in dignity.
This
is the work especially of young people. I just met with the State
Department’s newest Embassy Youth Council, based here in Dublin. We now
have 50 youth councils around the world, made up of students,
entrepreneurs, civil society members, members of government. And I must
say, the Irish young people I just met with exuded talent, energy, and
optimism.
And you really have all the tools you need: your voice,
your vote, your intellect and education, your compassion and conscience.
This should be your fight. I can certainly promise you, it will
continue to be mine. I will continue advocating for civil society,
working to make democracy real, pushing for Internet freedom, standing
with religious minorities, women, LGBT communities, people with
disabilities – anyone else who someone says are less human and therefore
less deserving of their human rights.
I’ve traveled to more
countries and far flung places than I could have imagined as a young
girl growing up in the middle of America in the decades that followed
World War II. And I must say that among the most striking things that I
have learned is how much we have in common. I’ve sat down with people
everywhere, discussing what was in their hearts and on their minds. And
it doesn’t take long to find commonality which is often overlooked,
ignored, dismissed, and rejected otherwise.
I remember as if it
were yesterday putting together a meeting in Belfast City Hall, with a
group of people, predominantly women, from both communities, who had
never, ever been in the same room with one another, and certainly had
never sat down at the same table for tea. And there was a lot of
uneasiness and discomfort in that room. And I began talking and asking
questions about what their lives were like. And one woman said, “Every
time my husband leaves for work, I worry that he won’t come home at
night.” And then this – eyes lit up of another woman across the table,
who said, “Well, I worry the same thing about my son when he goes out at
night.”
One of the people at that meeting was a great friend of
mine, Inez McCormack, a labor leader in Northern Ireland who had fought
for the rights of working people, had taken up the cause of peace and
reconciliation, and worked tirelessly to bring the communities together
around issues of economic justice and fairness, and paid particular
attention to the vital voices of women. Inez lives in Derry, where she’s
fighting cancer, and I called her before coming here to check in on
her, and asked her how she was doing. She’s very brave and putting up
with all the treatments, knowing that it’s a hard road for her. And she
did not want to talk about herself; she wanted to talk about her
daughter, who moved up the date of her wedding, which made her very
happy.
But she wanted to talk about how we had to keep working to
bring people together so that they would recognize the common humanity
and experience in the other, the fact that they want to be part of a
family and a community; a good job and a livelihood; a chance to learn
and try to make sense of the world; to seek meaning and fulfillment in
their choice of religious faith and practice.
There are so many
more ties that bind us than divide us, and that is what has motivated me
over many years now. Because I see the changes as I saw in that room in
Belfast all those years ago. And this is work not just for some of us,
but for all of us. And I hope it will give you both hope and purpose in
the years ahead.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)