Former UN Special Rapporteur Calls for National Housing Program for Canada



Speaking at UBC’s Liu Institute on November 26, 2009, Miloon Kothari, a former UN Special Rapporteur, called for Canada to give greater legal recognition to housing rights and to undertake a national housing strategy. Mr. Kothari is the author of the 2007 UN Human Rights Council Report on Adequate Housing in Canada.
Kothari explained that the right to housing is included in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and in numerous international Covenants such as the Rights of the Child, the Status of Refugees, and the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. Housing rights include social and economic components such as access to public goods (i.e. water, electricity) and also civil and political elements such as privacy and freedom from forced evictions.
Currently one billion people in the world lack adequate housing and 100 million are homeless. The problem has been exacerbated by the financial crisis which has led many to lose their homes, by climate change and food crises which force people to relocate, by counter-terrorism and security concerns especially directed at certain populations such as migrants, and by the general process of urbanization which will see 60% of the world’s population, or 5 billion people, living in cities by 2030.
Kothari noted particular housing concerns in Vancouver related to the coming Olympics. Targets for social housing are not being met, there is inadequate protection from evictions, and laws allowing forcible removal of homeless people are worrisome.
Some positive developments are occurring at local, national and international levels. Kothari cited the Montreal Charter as a positive example which requires the city and its partners to take appropriate housing measures. He noted that a private member’s bill submitted by Vancouver MP Libby Davies calls for a national housing strategy and has currently passed second reading in the House of Commons. And finally he noted that the new United Nations Human Rights Council has a Universal Periodic Review which asks countries to redress human rights shortcomings and report on their efforts.
Mr. Kothari’s presentation was sponsored by the UBC School of Social Work, UBC Liu Institute for Global Issues, UBC Habitat Exchange, the Vancouver branches of the United Nations Association of Canada, and the World Federalist Movement-Canada.
Biography:
Miloon Kothari is a prominent international voice on human rights, especially economic, social and cultural rights. Mr. Kothari is an outspoken critic of the countries and institutions that see the neo-liberal and military/security policies as a means to achieving democracy and human rights. Formerly UN Human Rights Council Special Rapporteur on adequate housing (2000-2008), he is also the convener of the Habitat International Coalition’s Housing and Land Rights Network and a founding member of the International NGO Committee on Human Rights in Trade and Investment (INCHRITI). He has also been actively involved in works related to the human rights dimension on poverty, water and sanitation. In his work as Rapporteur he has also focused on strategies to ensure respect for human rights in post-conflict and post-disaster situations.
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