从土地上流离失所是埃塞俄比亚实现发展权的一个限制

ST Abegaz
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引用次数: 2

摘要

土地仍然是占总人口约85%的埃塞俄比亚农村人口的宝贵资产。在埃塞俄比亚和其他大多数非洲国家等发展中农业经济中,土地和发展是密不可分的。任何有意义的社会、经济和文化发展或人民的自决都取决于行使政府权力的人如何保护、守卫和捍卫土地。根据人权法,国家有义务尊重土地和其他财产权,防止第三方侵犯人民的权利,防止在内部冲突中剥夺财产。虽然过去几个月出现了迅速而复杂的新发展- -确实改变了埃塞俄比亚的政治格局- -但这些发展也带来了某些危险。其中最突出的是大规模的内部冲突和大量人口流离失所,给数十万阿姆哈拉人和奥罗莫人以及其他族裔群体造成了骇人听闻的痛苦。35年前,发展权作为一项不可剥夺的人权得到普遍承认。1993年通过的《维也纳宣言和行动纲领》坚决强调了对发展权利的普遍承认。包括埃塞俄比亚在内的许多非洲国家也在国内承认发展权,并将发展权明确载入《联邦宪法》,作为一项基本权利。本文利用现有文献,通过探究埃塞俄比亚如何追求流离失所和发展人权,研究了土地流离失所的含义,并调查了其对发展权未实现的影响。考虑到土地上的持续流离失所以及对各民族对其财产的自决权的影响,文章提出的论点是,如果没有严格遵守土地权利,2063年和2030年可持续发展议程将无法实现其提高绝大多数埃塞俄比亚人民生活水平的目的。由美国农业部出版
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Displacement from land as a limit to the realisation of the right to development in Ethiopia
Land remains a valuable asset to the Ethiopian rural population that constitutes approximately 85 per cent of the total population. Land and development are inextricably intertwined in developing agricultural economies such as Ethiopia and the majority of other African countries. Any meaningful social, economic and cultural development or self-determination of the people depends on how land is protected, guarded and defended by those who wield government powers. The state assumes, under human rights law, an obligation to respect land and other property rights and to prevent violations of the people’s rights by third parties and against property dispossession during internal conflicts. While the past few months have seen rapid and complex new developments – literally transforming the landscape of Ethiopian politics – these developments also bring certain dangers. Prominent among these are the large-scale internal conflicts and major population displacements that have caused appalling suffering to hundreds of thousands of Amhara and Oromo people and other ethnic groups. It is over three-and-a-half decades since the right to development gained universal recognition as an inalienable human right. The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action adopted in 1993 firmly underlines the universal recognition of the right to development. The right to development has also gained domestic recognition in many African countries, including Ethiopia, where it is explicitly enshrined in the Federal Constitution as one of the fundamental rights. Using available literature, this article examines the implications of displacement from land and investigates its impacts on the non-realisation of the right to development by inquiring how displacement and the human right to development are being pursued in Ethiopia. Considering the continued displacement from their lands and the implications for the right to self-determination of the various ethnic groups over their property, the article advances the argument that, without a strict adherence to land rights, the 2063 and 2030 agendas for sustainable development would fail to achieve their purpose in making living standards better for the vast majority of the people of Ethiopia. Published by the UFS
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