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Youth UPF visit to Regents Park Mosque |
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By Robin Marsh
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Sunday, 16 June 2013 |
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 Youth Universal Peace Federation (UPF) members visited Regents Park Mosque today to 'Walk Hand in Hand and Shoulder to Shoulder to Heal our Communities'. Supported by Sheikh Dr Hojjat Ramzy, the Muslim Council of Britain Education Committee Chairman, the group of young and old UPF activists from several different faiths, were introduced to Sheikh Imam Khalifa, the Imam of the Regents Park Mosque. He reflected on the current situation of the Muslim community. He shared that humanity all have the same heart and spirit given to them by the creator but we developed differently due to Allah's wisdom. We should not harm another community because of those differences. (Photo Link) |
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Countering Religious Tensions in Nigeria |
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By Hon. Salisu Ahmed Bara u
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Friday, 07 June 2013 |
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Hon. Salisu Ahmed Bara u Commissioner for Religion in Bauchi State, Nigeria
This is a great pleasure for our Nigerian delegation to be speaking in the British Parliament centring on the words of freedom. This year’s celebration of Africa Day is indeed a rare opportunity for myself and my Christian brother Rev. Kato. We have been in a Government for about six years now. My Governor always says, ‘if you think peace is not important try war’. Our State is the birthplace of Boca Haram but it is the most peaceful of the northern Nigerian states. Through our Governor we were introduced to the Universal Peace Federation (UPF). We have had the opportunity to come close to the UPF and I had the chance to go to a UPF conference in Seoul, South Korea. |
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Rt Hon Tom Brake MP - Riots and Human Rights |
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By David Wills
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Friday, 16 December 2011 |
Rt. Hon. Tom Brake MP, Liberal Democrat spokesman for Home Affairs issues, took a Human Rights angle on the recent riots in the United Kingdom. He expressed his concern that Human Rights are experiencing a backlash in UK at the moment. They had not restricted the police in dealing with the looting. “The police does not want or need new weapons, curfew powers, or the power to shut down social networks”, he stated and expressed his concern about misleading language in the media, when it comes to “so-called Human Rights.” |
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Minority Community Rights in Europe by Prof. Lord Bhikhu Parekh |
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By David Wills
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Friday, 16 December 2011 |
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Prof. Lord Bhikhu Parekh, Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Westminster stated that Human Rights must include socio-economic rights. He expressed his concern that “rights are being chipped away” by budget cuts, “the war on immigration” and the practice of “stop and search” by British police.
Propositions
1) Human Rights in Europe are part of Liberal Jurisprudence
We do not have minority rights unlike nations like India or in parts of the Middle East or in South Africa or Canada. Rights here are fundamentally individual rights, enjoyed by minorities as individuals not as a collectivity. 2) Rights are not just civil and political. They are also social and economic rights and they extend to welfare and social benefit and lots of other things. |
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Multi-culturalism - A Contribution for Peace? |
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By Robin Marsh
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Sunday, 25 September 2011 |
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The United Nations, Geneva, 23rd September 2011
In a major conference in UN Geneva convened by the Universal Peace Federation and the Women's Federation for World Peace, the role of multiculturalism was considered by such influential figures as Ambassador Makarim Wibisono, the former Chair of UN's ECOSOC and UN Human Rights Council and Dr Walter Schwimmer, the former Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
In an introduction by Dr. Yong Cheon Song, Chairman of the Universal Peace Federation in Europe he quoted UPF's Founder, Dr Sun Myung Moon on the role of religion in solving interreligious and intercultural conflict.
'Religious people have not always been good examples in the practice of love and living for the sake of others, especially beyond the limits of their own culture. For this reason they should engage in deep self-reflection. It is time for religious people to repent for their preoccupation with individual salvation and narrow denominational interests.' Dr Moon suggested that an Inter-religious Council at the United Nations would be an ideal forum for dialogue between the religious-cultural spheres of the world. |
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