REPORT OF THE WORKING GROUP ON THE QUESTION OF THE USE OF MERCENARIES AS A MEANS OF VIOLATING HUMAN RIGHTS AND IMPEDING THE EXERCISE OF THE RIGHT OF PEOPLE TO SELF-DETERMINATION : ADDENDUM
However, the Working Group notes indications of the
capacity of some DynCorp employees to engage in direct combat if necessary. This was publicly reported
in 2001 when in the course of DynCorp’s logistical operations in Colombia, its employees engaged in
direct combat against Colombian rebels to rescue the crew of a helicopter that had been shot down by
guerrillas.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 1398508.7
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...pen&DS=A/HRC/4/42/ADD.2&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
REPORT OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE SALE OF CHILDREN, CHILD PROSTITUTION AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY, NAJAT MAALLA M'JID : ADDENDUM
The 2005 reform of the Criminal Code also reflected an
effort to combat illegal adoptions.
7. Juvenile justice
38. (...) The Office of the
Special Prosecutor needs more logistical support and investigators if it is to combat the
sexual exploitation of children effectively.
50. (...) Policies and programmes to combat the sale of children, child
prostitution and child pornography
1.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 946678.6
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...en&DS=A/HRC/22/54/ADD.2&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
REPORT OF THE WORKING GROUP ON THE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW - HUNGARY. ADDENDUM - VIEWS ON CONCLUSIONS AND/OR RECOMMENDATIONS, VOLUNTARY COMMITMENTS AND REPLIES PRESENTED BY THE STATE UNDER REVIEW
A/HRC/33/9/Add.1
15 GE.16-16035
97 Adopt a comprehensive, human rights based gender equality strategy.
98 Support the gender integration in all spheres of life.
99 Raise the legal age of marriage for women and men to 18 years.
100 Take further steps to ensure better labour market access and access to basic social and health services
for marginalized women, including women with disabilities, Roma women and migrant women.
101 Take additional measures to effectively combat violence against women and promote the participation
of women in political life and their insertion in the professional life.
102 Continue efforts, including by raising awareness, in order to prevent domestic violence and violence
against women.
103 Take concrete measures to protect child victims of sexual exploitation and prostitution.
104 Adopt a comprehensive law on domestic violence.
105 Consider adopting a law on domestic violence and criminalizing different types of violence against
women.
106 Promote public policies to prevent violence against women and girls, including domestic violence and
sexual violence.
107 Establish a law to criminalise all forms of violence against women.
108 Define rape criminally based on the lack of voluntary consent in addition to reinforcing and making
more accessible to victims the health care services.
109 Criminalize different types of violence against women, to amend the Criminal Code to ensure that
rape is defined according to the CEDAW recommendations.
110 Continue to enhance access to sexual and reproductive health services for women, in particular
women with disabilities, women with low income, women with HIV/AIDS, and women living in the
rural areas.
111 Enact laws and legislation aiming at combating human trafficking.
112 Ensure the prosecution and punishment of perpetrators of human trafficking, and provide adequate
assistance and protection services to victims.
113 Continue its efforts in order to strengthen the protection of victims of trafficking.
114 Take steps to reduce and prevent trafficking and provide adequate incentives and protection to
victims.
115 Take additional measures to combat trafficking in human beings.
116 Intensify efforts to effectively prevent trafficking in women and girls and strengthen measures for the
rehabilitation and social integration of victims of trafficking.
117 Take measures to ensure the effective investigation and prosecution of human trafficking cases and
establish remedy procedures for the victims.
118 Strengthen mechanisms to prevent the trafficking in boys and girls and provide the support needed for
victims of trafficking to be reintegrated into society.
119 Strengthen efforts to provide access to education, labour market and public life for persons with
disabilities.
120 Continue the path regarding positive results achieved in ensuring the rights and equal opportunities of
persons with disabilities by, inter alia, allocating sufficient resources for the development of an
inclusive education system for children with disabilities and providing sufficient and adequate support
services in local communities to enable persons with disabilities to live independently.
121 Consolidate programmes to ensure a system of inclusive education for children with disabilities
throughout the country.
122 Take further measures to improve access of persons with disabilities to social, economic and cultural
life and combat discrimination on the grounds of disability.
123 Adopt measures in order for any health decision to depend upon the free and informed consent of the
concerned disabled person.
124 Review all relevant legislations,includingtheState’snewFundamentalLawtoensurethatallpersons
with disabilities have a right to vote, and that they can participate in political and public life on an
equal basis with others.
125 Review legislations to ensure that all persons with disabilities have a right to vote, and that they can
participate in political and public life.
126 Adopt and implement a comprehensive strategy and action plan to tackle discrimination based on
sexual orientation and gender identity.
127 Adopt a strategy and a comprehensive plan of action to counter discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity.
128 Take comprehensive measures to counter discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation and
A/HRC/33/9/Add.1
GE.16-16035 16
gender identity.
129 Fight against discrimination based on the origin, gender and sexual orientation, by continuing its
efforts in the implementation of the existing instruments.
130 Adopt a comprehensive strategy in order to combat discrimination based on sexual orientation and
gender identity.
131 Provide adequate resources and functional independence to the Equal Treatment Authority.
132 Adopt measures to comply with provisions of the new Constitution including on combating
discrimination and ensuring equal participation in political and public affairs by all citizens.
133 Enact comprehensive legislation that fully guarantees the application of the principle of non-
discrimination and to ensure the full enjoyment of all human rights by every member of society.
134 Provide the national mechanism for the promotion of gender equality of adequate human and
financial resources to enable it to effectively fulfil its mandate.
135 Continue efforts in following up and monitoring any discrimination based on sex, race or any other
form.
136 Children’sCentres,Tanodanetwork,IntegratedPedagogicalSystem,For the Road program, Network
of Christian Roma Vocational Boarding Schools. (...) All Government agencies are open and ready for close cooperation with the Jewish
organisations.
167 Violent hate crime (§ 216), inciting hatred against a community (§ 332), denial in public of the crimes
committed by the National Socialist or Communist regimes (§ 333).
168 Take effective measures to ensure the Hungarian National Police and the hate-crimes expert net
improve the enforcement of laws against hate crimes, including by allocating sufficient resources;
undertaking thorough investigations and prosecution; and by providing training for the front-line law
enforcement.
169 Protect persons who are marginalized and most vulnerable from intolerance, xenophobia, and other
forms of discrimination.
170 Carry out the work to eliminate expressions of hatred, racial and religious discrimination.
171 Intensify national efforts to prevent and eliminate all manifestations of anti-Semitism and take
resolute measures to condemn hate speech, including against Roma.
172 Take action against the worrying increase and public use of hate speech, most often addressed at
migrants, asylum seekers but also civil society organizations and vulnerable groups.
173 Apply effectively policies against racism and hate speech.
174 Implement effectively its legislation and policies against hate speech and hate crimes with particular
focus on the human rights protection of Roma, Jews, LGBTIs and other vulnerable groups.
175 Identify efforts to combat all forms of discrimination and to ensure that hate crimes motivated by
racism, xenophobia or other forms of discrimination are effectively investigated and perpetrators are
brought to justice.
176 Enhance inter-ethnic, inter-religious, and inter-cultural understanding within the society, and ensure
access to justice for victims of racial hatred or violence.
177 Further strengthen measures to combat hate speech and hate crime.
178 Strengthen measures to avoid hate speeches of all kinds in political messages and in the media.
179 Combat hate speech and statements stigmatizing refugees and asylum seekers.
180 Prevent and combat racism and hate speech, including through human rights education and training,
and by promoting tolerance.
181 Enhance its efforts to prevent and root out all kind of national and ethnic intolerance, as well as
condemn any incitement to ethnic and religious hatred and hate speech against the Roma in particular.
182 Implement strategies aimed at tackling hate speech and xenophobia in all its forms.
183 Continue to fight anti-Semitism, and to oppose any attempt to relativize or rehabilitate anti-Semite
policies in the past and present.
184 Continue to strengthen measures to promote tolerance and respect for cultural diversity and to counter
A/HRC/33/9/Add.1
GE.16-16035 18
prejudice, stereotypes, discrimination, racism and Islamophobia.
185 Continue efforts to sensitize the public to combat discrimination on all grounds online to ensure that
all rights are respected.
186 Adopt a hate crime investigation protocol and ensure that victims of hate crimes have effective access
to the mechanisms of justice and redress.
187 Further step up efforts to publicly condemn hate speech, including against Roma.
188 The Fourth Amendment of the Fundamental Law has added two essential elements to the provision
defining freedom of expression. (...) The other
innovation of the Amendment provides members of national, ethnic, racial or religious groups the
possibility to bring action before the court against any statement considered injurious to the group
alleging violation of their human dignity.
189 Ensure that the constitutional amendment prohibiting speech that would violate the dignity of the
Hungarian nation cannot be used to silence criticism and limit freedom of expression as guaranteed
under the ICCPR.
190 The asylum authority provides accommodation and care for asylum seekers during the asylum
procedure including free health care, support for education, housing, social services, the acquisition of
citizenship etc.
191 Strengthen its measures to combat racism and discrimination in all its forms against migrants and
asylum seekers.
192 Establish a comprehensive integration strategy for migrants, with specific measures to prevent and
eliminate racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and intolerance against migrants irrespective of
their status.
193 Continue to take specific measures to prevent and eliminate racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia

لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 939716.7
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...pen&DS=A/HRC/33/9/ADD.1&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
NOTE VERBALE DATED 2005/04/18 FROM THE PERMANENT MISSION OF CUBA TO THE UNITED NATIONS OFFICE AT GENEVA ADDRESSED TO THE OFFICE OF THE UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Reaffirms that States should respect and ensure compliance with their obligations under
international instruments of human rights and international humanitarian law in the context of
international military operations launched to combat terrorism;
2.. Demands States and other actors in international military operations launched to combat
terrorism to prevent the occurrence of extrajudicial executions, enforced disappearances,
torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and other grave
violations of international human rights and humanitarian law, and to take effective action to
combat and eliminate any violation of this kind in all forms and manifestations;
3.. (...) Urges States and other actors in international military operations launched to combat
terrorism to undertake all necessary and possible measures, in conformity with human rights
law and international humanitarian law, to prevent the loss of life of civilian persons, in
particular that of women and children;
E/CN.4/2005/G/43
Page 16
5.. (...) The resolution was called: Question of Protecting Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedom in the Context of Military Operations Launched to Combat
Terrorism”.
Draft resolution L.17.Rev.1 was proposed by the Cuban delegation to the meeting as part of its
on-going efforts started at the Human Rights Commissions 6Oth period of sessions.

لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 939716.7
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...pen&DS=E/CN.4/2005/G/43&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
يوم المياه العالمي | الأراضي والمياه | منظمة الأغذية والزراعة للأمم المتحدة | Land & Water | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
FAO.org
العربية
中文
english
français
Русский
Español
الأراضي والمياه
رؤية عامة
الأراضي
المياه
قواعد البيانات والبرمجيات
الأخبار
الأحداث
التوعية
SOLAW 2021
Launch of SOLAW 2021 at the Land and Water Days 2021
SOLAW21: UN Food Summit Science Days Side Event
IWRA’s Online Conference
World Water Day 2021
FAO-OECD Roundtable on Financing Agricultural Water
2020 Dresden Nexus Conference
يوم المياه العالمي
International symposium on the use of nonconventional waters
2nd Workshop on Development Impact and SDGs
Webinar on "Water productivity, the yield gap and nutrition"
World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought 2019
1st WASAG International Forum on Water Scarcity in Agriculture
FAO @ World Water Forum 8
International Forum on Solar Technologies for Small-scale Agriculture and Water Management
Land and Water Days
Events Archive
العلم واضح: أزمة تغير المناخ العالمي تعمل على تبديل دورة المياه.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 939395.1
-
https://www.fao.org/land-water/events/wwd2020/ar/
مصدر البيانات: un
Évariste also has almost ten years of total experience in bilateral and multilateral technical cooperation: African Timber Organization (ATO), land planning in Cameroon, Global Mechanism of the Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) and now the HLPE.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 939395.1
-
https://www.fao.org/cfs/cfs-hlpe/secretariat/ar/
مصدر البيانات: un
MINEFIELD MARKING METHODOLOGIES / PRESENTED BY THE AUSTRALIAN DELEGATION
ﳝﻨﻊ ﺍﺳﺘﻌﻤﺎﳍﺎ ﻛﺴﻼﺡ ﺣﺮﰊ ﺗﻜﺘﻴﻜﻲ ﲞﻄﺮ ﺍﻷﻟﻐﺎﻡ ﻋﻠﻰ ﻏﲑ ﺍﳌﻘﺎﺗﻠﲔ ﻭﻟﻜﻨﻪ ﻻ
CCW/GGE/IX/WG.2/WP.2
Page 6
ﻲﺷﺍﻮﳊﺍ
) ١ ( Primary Standardisation Offices, 1998, QSTAG 943 - Glossary of Engineer Terminology,
Washington, p. 54.
) ٢ ( ﺔﺤﻔﺼﻟﺍ ،ﻖﺑﺎﺴﻟﺍ ﻊﺟﺮﳌﺍ ٤٩ .
) ٣ ( ﺔﺤﻔﺼﻟﺍ ،ﻖﺑﺎﺴﻟﺍ ﻊﺟﺮﳌﺍ ٤٧ .
) ٤ ( ﺔﺤﻔﺼﻟﺍ ،ﻖﺑﺎﺴﻟﺍ ﻊﺟﺮﳌﺍ ٥٣ .
) ٥ ( ﻊﺟﺮﳌﺍ ﺔﺤﻔﺼﻟﺍ ،ﻖﺑﺎﺴﻟﺍ ٤٧ .
) ٦ ( Combat Arms Training Centre, 2003, Land Warfare Procedures - Combat Arms (Combat
Engineers) [LWP-CA 2-1-6] Marking of Hazardous Areas and Safe Routes, Puckapunyal para. 2.15.
) ٧ ( ﺓﺮﻘﻔﻟﺍ ،ﻖﺑﺎﺴﻟﺍ ﻊﺟﺮﳌﺍ ٢ -١٧ .
ﻊﺟﺍﺮﳌﺍ ﺖﺒﺛ
Army Doctrine Centre, 1997, Corps Training Note Part 3 - Counter Mobility, Volume 4, Employment, Recording
and Reporting of Stackable Mines”, Georges Heights.
Combat Arms Training Centre, 2003, Land Warfare Procedures - Combat Arms (Combat Engineers)
[LWP-CA 2-1-6] Marking of Hazardous Areas and Safe Routes, Puckapunyal.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 935940.6
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...DS=CCW/GGE/IX/WG.2/WP.2&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
REPORT OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON CONTEMPORARY FORMS OF SLAVERY, INCLUDING ITS CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES, GULNARA SHAHINIAN :ADDENDUM
Conclusions and recommendations......................................................................... 98–132 18
A. Recommendations to combat slave labour in rural areas................................ 102–116 19
B. (...) (b) Other programmes to combat slave labour
45. In 1997, the Social Monitoring Institute was created to research and analyse how
Brazilian corporations respect the rights of their workers. (...) In
addition, companies needed to do more work to combat discrimination in the workplace.
4. Remaining challenges
(a) Gaps in laws and policies
55.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 931596.2
-
https://daccess-ods.un.org/acc...en&DS=A/HRC/15/20/ADD.4&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
DECLARATION OF CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS ATTENDING THE 9TH SESSION OF THE CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES : CONVENTION TO COMBAT DESERTIFICATION : DRAFT DECISION / SUBMITTED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES
DECLARATION OF CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS ATTENDING THE 9TH SESSION OF THE CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES : CONVENTION TO COMBAT DESERTIFICATION : DRAFT DECISION / SUBMITTED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 928731.25
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...pen&DS=ICCD/COP(9)/L.17&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods
REPORT OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE SALE OF CHILDREN, CHILD PROSTITUTION AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY ON HER VISIT TO ARMENIA : NOTE / BY THE SECRETARIAT
The Special Rapporteur commended Armenia for enhancing its efforts to combat
trafficking in persons through the adoption in 2015 of the Law on Identification and Assistance
to Victims of Human Trafficking and Exploitation. (...) She urged the Government to
speed up the adoption of the law to combat violence against women and domestic violence as an
essential tool to effectively combat and prevent child sexual abuse and exploitation.
(...) In
February 2014, the Government adopted the National Strategy on Human Rights Protection,
which stresses the need to develop a comprehensive strategy to combat violence against
children, under the joint responsibility of the Ministry of Labour and Social Issues and the
police.
لغة:العربية
نتيجة: 926981.1
-
https://daccess-ods.un.org/acc...en&DS=A/HRC/31/58/ADD.2&Lang=A
مصدر البيانات: ods