2004 - General Meeting Resolutions
At the 2004 General Meeting in Adelaide, Australia the following resolutions were adopted
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Resolution on Australian visa regulations
The International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW) General Meeting strongly condemns the actions of the Australian Government in preventing the Uganda Social Work delegate from entering Australia to attend the General Meeting of the IFSW in Adelaide 29th September to 1st October 2004.IFSW is the International Body which represents nearly half a million social workers in 80 countries
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Resolution on Sudan
The United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 1556 on 30 July 2004.“Condemning all acts of violence of human rights and international humanitarian law by all parties to the crisis (in Darfur, Sudan), in particular by the Janjaweed, including indiscriminate attacks on civilians, rapes, forced displacements, and acts of violence especially those with an ethnic dimension, and expressing its utmost concern at the consequences of the conflict in Darfur on the civilian population, including women, children, internally displaced persons, and refugees.”
The United Nations estimates that over 1.2 million people are internally displaced in Darfur, a region in Sudan, and another 200,000 have taken refuge in Chad. Those who have fled their homes left behind the bodies of family members and friends who died as a result of raids by Janjaweed militia. Left behind are also charred villages and destroyed croplands burned down as people fled in what appears to be a deliberate effort by the apparent support of the Sudan Government for the Arab militia, the primary perpetrators of this travesty.
What started as an effort to control rebel movement by two groups (the Sudan Liberation Movement and the Justice and Equality Movement) has grown into acts of violence on a scale that has resulted in violations of human rights and international law and genocide. There are two components: the scorched earth policy and its extreme consequences, and, the efforts to curtail and obstruct assistance to the victims of the violence. As recently as 9 September 2004, Koffi Anan, Secretary General of the United Nations, asserted that more can and should be done. He also reported that security problems persist and that most of the militia have not been disarmed.
Therefore be it resolved that:
WE, the member organisations of the International Federation of Social Workers, condemn and abhor indiscriminate attacks on civilians, forced displacements, rape and starvations as the means of control, and acts of violence especially those with an ethnic dimension.
WE support the United Nations in its efforts to resolve these issues with increased disaster assistance and humanitarian assistance. It is also important to support efforts to resolve the underlying causes that led to the present crisis. We call on the Government of Sudan to extend full cooperation with the UN efforts. And, we call on all governments to provide the resources necessary to stop this tragic violation of human rights.
IFSW General Meeting 2004
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Resolution on Administrative Detentions
The General Meeting of IFSW, representing more than 450,000 social workers in 80 countries throughout the world, deplores the use of indefinite detention without charge or trial wherever this takes place.It expresses its opposition to the widespread use by Israel of administrative detention in the territory of the Palestinian Authority including the reported detention of Palestinian social workers.
It urges the Israeli government and judicial administration to consider each of these cases and offer them a due process, fair and open trial or to release them in the pursuance and respect of their basic human rights in line with the commitment of the Israeli government to international human rights conventions.
Adelaide, Australia October 1, 2004
IFSW General Meeting 2004
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page last updated on 11.10.2005


