Statement by Deputy  Minister Alvin Botes during the High-Level Panel National Statement during the 43rd  Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council, Geneva, 24 February 2020 
        Madam President, 
        The President of the 74th Session of  the United Nations General Assembly, H.E. Mr. Tijjani Muhammad-Bande, 
          United Nations Secretary-General,  H.E. Mr. António Guterres, 
          The High Commissioner for Human  Rights, Ms Michelle Bachelet, 
          Honourable Ministers and Deputy  Ministers, 
          Your Excellencies, 
          Ladies and Gentlemen, 
        30 years ago Nelson Mandela was  released from prison and liberation movements were unbanned after decades of  struggle against Apartheid, a Crime Against Humanity. These events ignited a  journey towards a constitutional democracy infused with the characteristics  acquired through decades of struggle against injustice. This is the context of  South Africa’s commitment to fostering a human rights centred governance and  foreign policy. 
        South Africa’s foreign policy is  therefore predicated on respecting, promoting, protecting, and fulfilling all  human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinctions of any kind. 
        We therefore urge this Council to  refrain from the false dichotomy between human rights and development and treat  all human rights with the same emphasis in line with the International Bill of  Rights, the Vienna Declaration and the Declaration on the Right to Development. 
        Madam President, 
        International solidarity was  important for the attainment of a human rights centred democracy in South  Africa. Hence our foreign policy places strong emphasis on solidarity and  cooperation amongst nations.  Our participation in the High-Level Segment  of the 43rd Session of the Council is therefore guided by the Southern African  philosophy of Ubuntu, “I am because you are”; meaning that our fates are  inextricably linked and symbiotically intertwined. 
        2021 marks the 20th Anniversary of  the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, adopted during the 2001 World  Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related  Intolerance (WCAR). As part of the Africa Group we call on all UN member states  to support the proposed initiative of a high-level meeting at the 76th Session  of the United Nations General Assembly, in 2021, to review progress made since  the 2001 WCAR and chart a way forward as a step to combat rising forms of  racism and other forms of oppression globally. 
        Madam President, 
        2020 is also the 25th Anniversary of  Beijing Conference. Across the world though, women and girls are still  marginalised socially, economically and subjected to gender-based violence. We  should recommit to the provisions of the Beijing Platform of Action to build a  substantively equal world, free from discrimination and violence. In this  regard, we should take concrete measures in addressing the plight of women by  strengthening institutions and accountability to ensure their full and effective  participation. 
        Systemic poverty is debilitating and  deprives women and children of all their human rights. Poverty arises out of  policies and laws and these need to be changed through our collective efforts  and cooperation. 
        We maintain that any framework  guiding nations on women empowerment should also prioritise the full economic  inclusion of women. In this regard, we are heartened that the last AU Assembly  declared the period 2020-2030 as the Decade of Women’s Economic and Financial  Inclusion. This includes closing the wage gap through equal pay for work of  equal value. 
        Madam President, 
        We concur with the  Secretary-General, Mr Antonio Guterres, that the climate crisis is the biggest  threat to our survival as a species and is already threatening the enjoyment of  human rights across the globe. To this end, the international community should  work together to address the adverse impacts of climate change. 
        Madam President, 
        The continued occupation of the  Palestinian people and the people of Western Sahara and the concomitant denial  of their human rights remains a concern for South Africa. We firmly believe  that only initiatives developed with the full participation of the people of  Western Sahara, in line with international law that can yield a just and  lasting peace. 
        With respect to Palestine only  substantive negotiations guided by the parameters of international law will  lead to just ending of the occupation. We are concerned about the unrelenting  effort to under-value the human rights pillar of the United Nations system. We  share the goals of more efficient institutions within the multilateral system,  but this must not be done at the expense of full participation by member states  in the important work of the Human Rights Council. We therefore do not support  attempts to remove under the ‘colour of efficiency’, agenda items 7 and 9  dealing with the persistent human rights abuses of the people of Palestine and  those who face discrimination and violence based on race, respectively. 
        In conclusion, the 75th Anniversary  of the United Nations and the 65th Anniversary of the Bandung Conference are  important reminders of the importance of multilateralism, human solidarity and  cooperation amongst nations. 
        South Africa is of the view that an  ideal and just multilateral system is one based on inclusivity and legitimacy.  Hence, we should seize the moment of the 75th Anniversary of the UN to advance  the UN reform process. 
        I thank you 
        ISSUED BY  THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND COOPERATION 
        OR Tambo  Building 
          460  Soutpansberg Road 
          Rietondale 
          Pretoria 
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