During this
lockdown, we’re all realising how much we’ve taken for granted, whether it’s
the hard work of the NHS, time spent with our friends and family or the simple
pleasure of popping to the shop whenever we want to.
Something
else many of us in the UK routinely take for granted is our human rights;
‘inalienable’ as the Universal Declaration states them to be. Yet now, surely for the first time since that
landmark document was adopted in 1948, many of the fundamental rights enshrined
in it have been suspended. In a sense,
it seems we hardly noticed.
Everyone has the right to freedom of
movement and residence
within the borders of each state.
Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own,
and to return
to his country.
Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion;
this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom,
either alone or in community with others and in public or private,
to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.
Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.
Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Articles 13, 18 & 20
Just a few weeks ago, it was
unimaginable that society, our social order, our ways of life would be so
thoroughly upended as they have; nor that these rights would be taken from
us. We assumed that our rights were so
sacrosanct that we barely had to think about them; they were just part of our
everyday. In their great proclamations,
it seems even the writers of the Universal Declaration did not foresee a time
when any of our human rights would be alienable. In a way, they set us up to take them for
granted, and that may be what they intended.
In fact, a few years later, the wily
writers of the European Convention on Human Rights did make some
allowances. The corresponding rights to
those in the Universal Declaration include the provision for ‘limitations as
are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of public safety, for the protection of public order, health or
morals’. Article fifteen allows
derogations in a time of public emergency threatening the life of the nation.
It’s another indication of how great
our emergency is that most of us have accepted the restrictions placed upon us
without thinking about the rights that have been taken from us. There are, of course, other rights that take
priority now – not least, the simple right to life. Rights also go hand-in-hand with
responsibilities and in our ‘all in this together’ spirit, we recognise that
our responsibility to each other’s welfare, especially that of the elderly and
vulnerable and of our doctors and nurses, outweighs our individual rights. It’s an interesting and perhaps surprising
consequence of this crisis.
I’ve had darker moments though, when
I’ve slipped into a more dystopian mindset.
What if this emergency lasts longer than we think? How could it be exploited by an unsavoury
leader? If the emergency deepens and
worsens, might the restrictions need tightening further?
To promote further isolation, maybe
fewer professions will be considered essential so journalists, for example,
could be told to stay at home. There are
other ways that governments can share their daily briefings, after all. There goes our free press. Too much ‘fake news’ about this virus on
social media might necessitate some intervention there too, all in the
interests of health and well-being, of course.
Perhaps, free access to supermarkets will eventually prove too risky and
they will need to close with generous food parcels sent to every household instead
– along with government-approved recipes.
Everyone should have exercise but not everyone can be trusted to have
the right amount of exercise or to avoid associating with others whilst doing
it. To keep everyone safely socially
distanced, every street could be allotted a specific time to exercise and a
specific route, supervised by the Police.
A larger police force will probably be needed too, complete with drones
to keep a closer eye on us. It’s not
realistic for teachers to indefinitely teach remotely and surely children
deserve greater consistency than we can deliver from our dining rooms, bedrooms
and studies. Why not simply beam one
standard lesson from a Whitehall ‘classroom’ direct into homes all across the
country? Parliament has already been
suspended and needn’t rush back – certainly not until it’s 100% safe for its
members to reconvene. If necessary,
elections can be postponed.
It's a nightmare vision that I wake up
from and almost completely dismiss. ‘Almost
completely’ because never in my life – never in most of our lives – has
anything even close to it ever been as imaginable as it is now. It reminds me of how precious our rights are;
how we will all be relieved to have them returned to us and how we will
celebrate. Maybe they are one more thing
we will learn not to take for granted.
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