My Body My Right 2022
My Body My Right 2022
My Body My Right 2022
SHEL 000
2022
Ms L Tladi
Objectives
• What are human rights
• Differentiate between a right and responsibility
• Why are Rights Necessary?
• Discuss AMNESTY international campaign
• Differentiate between sexual rights and sexual health
• Differentiate between reproduction rights and
reproductive health
• Possible interventions
Objectives continue…….
• Discuss harmful Traditional Practices
• Impact of human and social consequences of human
trafficking
• Action: innovative approaches to solving complex
problems
• Amnesty prisoner of conscience
• Discuss female genital mutilation (FGM)
• Complications of FGM
What are human rights?
• Basic human rights inherent to all human beings
• We inherit them just by being human
• Everyone is entitled to these rights, without
discrimination
What is the difference between a right
and a responsibility?
• RIGHTS - The rules that help make everyone equal
You have some rights when you are born - human right
You also have legal rights, which are backed by the law
It is important to know your rights so that if people try to take
them away you can stop them.
• RESPONSIBILITIES- things which others expect us to do
Responsible people know what their rights and respect the
rights of others
Being responsible means you care about other people’s rights
Why is it important to have Human
Rights?
• To make sure people’s rights are met
• To allow people to stand up to societal injustices
• To encourage freedom of speech and expression
• They allow people to love who they choose
• They provide a universal standard that holds governments
accountable
Amnesty International
• Amnesty International’s mission is to:
Undertake research
Action focussed on preventing
Ending grave abuses of the rights to physical
Mental integrity
The context of its work to promote all human rights will be to promote freedom of
Conscience
Expression
Discrimination
• The organization opposes abuses by opposition groups, including
the ff:
Hostage-taking
Torture and killings of prisoners
Other deliberate and arbitrary killings
Assists asylum-seekers who are at risk of being returned to a country
where they will be at risk of violations of basic and fundamental
human rights
Cooperates with other non-governmental organisation (NGO),United
Nations (UN) and with regional intergovernmental organizations;
Ensures control of international military, security and police relations
Organises human rights education and awareness-raising programs.
Campaigning for Human Rights
• The roles of Human rights activist :
delegates visit different countries to meet victims of human rights
violations, observe trials, and interview local human rights activists and
officials.
mobilize public opinion to put pressure on governments and others with
influence to stop human rights abuses.
Support people to claim their rights through education and training.
Activities range from public demonstrations to letter-writing, from human
rights education to fundraising concerts etc
Campaigning Context
• Despite the fact that sexual and reproductive rights are human
rights, violations take place on a daily basis.
• Many women and girls around the world do not have control
over their own bodies and
Struggle to access the information and services they need for a healthy life include:
Sex education
Reproductive health
Gender and sex education
• Although Amnesty International has not recorded any cases to date, it is punishable by
death in Afghanistan, Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Yemen,
and parts of Nigeria and Somalia.
Young men and women between the ages of 15 and 24 have the highest rate
There are 340 million new sexually transmitted infections around the world each
year.
3000 young people around the world are infected with HIV every day
Prevalence of Pregnancy
If present trends continue the number of child marriages each year will
be 15 million by 2030, a 14% rise.
The occurrence of violence
According to Amnesty and WHO
• 150 million girls across the world under the age of 18 have been sexually assaulted.
50 % of those were under 16 when it happened.
• For 64 per cent of women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, their first
sexual experience was assault.
• In the United States, 83 per cent of girls aged 12 to 16 in state-run schools have
experienced sexual harassment at school.
• 140 million women and girls worldwide been subjected to Female Genital Mutilation
(FGM). Three million girls worldwide remain at risk of the procedure every year.
• One in three women worldwide have experienced violence and/or sexual abuse.
Sexual and Reproductive Rights
What is sexuality?
• Sexuality - a central aspect of being human throughout life and
encompasses sex
• Gender identities and roles, sexual orientation,
• Eroticism (sexual desire), pleasure, intimacy and reproduction.
• Sexual rights are a part of the universal declaration of human rights and consist of
the right of all persons – including the ff:
• Those with disabilities
• Free of discrimination
• Without coercion, or violence
• To seek and receive information related to sexuality
• Bodily integrity respected
• To decide whether to be sexually active
• Engage in consensual sexual relationships.
• Sexual rights are universal human rights based on
• The inherent freedom,
• Dignity
• Equality of all human beings.
They are interrelated and sometimes overlap with
reproductive rights, but they are not synonymous with
reproductive rights.
Sexual rights include:
The right to choose one’s sexual partner
To control one’s own body,
To experience sexual pleasure, t
Not be abused or violated,
Freely choose contraceptive methods,
Access to safe and legal abortion,
Access to information about prevention of sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
Comprehensive sexuality education.
Sexual rights
Access Sexual and Reproductive Health Education and Family Planning Information
Forced or early marriage is also called a child marriage and can bring a
lifetime of disadvantages for the children involved.
• The result of practices that marginalize entire groups of people and make
them particularly vulnerable to being trafficked may lead to :
• Disempowerment,
• Social exclusion
• Economic vulnerability.
o All factors that push individuals into situations of trafficking include
o Mass displacement, conflict, lack of access to education and job opportunities,
violence, and harmful social norms like child marriage
Impact
• The human and social consequences of human
trafficking may lead to:
Physical abuse
Torture of victims to the psychological and emotional trauma,
Economic and political implications of unabated crime
Ostracism
Lack of independent living skills
What is the solution?
• College Students:
Take action on your campus.
Join or establish a university club to raise awareness about human trafficking and
initiate action throughout your local community
• Journalists:
The media plays an enormous role in shaping perceptions and guiding the public
conversation about human trafficking
• Attorneys:
Offer human trafficking victims legal services, including support for those seeking
benefits or special immigration status.
What is the solution?
• Businesses:
Provide jobs, internships, skills training, and other opportunities to
trafficking survivors.
• Faith-Based Communities:
Host awareness events and community forums with anti-trafficking
leaders or collectively support a local victim service provider
WHAT IS THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN
HUMAN RIGHTS AND HUMAN
TRAFFICKING?
• Human rights most relevant to trafficking:
The prohibition of discrimination on the basis of race, colour, sex,
language,
religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property,
birth, or other status
The right to life
The right to liberty and security
The right not to be submitted to slavery, servitude, forced labour or
bonded labour
Human rights most relevant to trafficking:
The right to be free from gendered
violence
The right to freedom of association
The right to freedom of movement
The right to the highest attainable
standard of physical and mental health
Amnesty prisoner of conscience
• Prisoner of conscience (POC) is a term coined by Peter Benenson in a 28
May 1961 article ("The Forgotten Prisoners") for the London Observer
newspaper.
• Most often associated with the human rights organisation Amnesty
International, the term can refer to anyone imprisoned because of their
race, sexual orientation, religion, or political views
• It also refers to those who have been imprisoned and/or persecuted for
the non-violent expression of their conscientiously held beliefs
• Any person who is physically restrained (by imprisonment or otherwise)
from expressing (in any form of words or symbols) any opinion which he
honestly holds and which does not advocate or condone personal
violence
Amnesty is calling for the following:
• Call on the government to:
Urgently finalise national termination of pregnancy guidelines and
ensure their dissemination in all provinces of South Africa;
Ensure provision of reproductive health commodities – medical
abortion drugs and other apparatus and ensure health providers are
well trained through CPD processes to maintain their registration
Work with inter-ministerial partners and local governments for the
stringent enforcement of by-laws to tackle illegal abortion providers,
including introducing steps to address illegal advertising
Amnesty’s calling continues…..
• Call on the government to:
Mainstream sexual and reproductive health and rights,
including contraception and safe abortion, into the health
agenda;
Celebrate ‘Abortion Provider Appreciation Day’ annually on
10 March; and
Engage the US government about the urgent need to repeal
the ‘Global Gag Rule’ in South Africa.
Spread the Word, break the taboo
• To resolve these problems, you have to challenge the ignorance
that surrounds the issue
• We need to raise awareness – and make sure that those who
already have information on sexual rights share it with others
• We need to spread this information by word of mouth and
equally, encourage young volunteers to help.
• Government includes sexuality and reproduction into school
programmes
• We need to reach out to parents and adults so that they feel
comfortable talking about the subject with their children