Health, right to: standards and mechanisms

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Websites/Multiple Documents

Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
Grouping: Websites/Multiple Documents
Language: English, French, Francais, Espanol, Spanish
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Individual Documents

Description: Article 12
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: English
Local URL:
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Description: Article 25
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: Burmese/ မွနျမာဘာသာ
Local URL:
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Description: Article 25
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: English
Local URL:
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Description: Article 25
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: Pwo-Karen
Local URL:
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Description: Article 25
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: S'gaw-Karen
Local URL:
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Description: Article 25
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: Shan
Local URL:
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Description: No.14. The right to the highest attainable standard of health (art. 12)
Source/publisher: Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Date of entry/update: 2010-11-30
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language:
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Description: "With largely consolidated control over Dooplaya District in southern Karen State the SPDC and DKBA, as the two dominant (and allied) military forces, operate under a system of coexistence. The local civilian population, in turn, faces exploitative governance on two fronts as both SPDC and DKBA soldiers seek to extract money, labour, food and other supplies from them. Enforcing heavy movement restrictions on top of persistent exploitative demands, local communities are facing deteriorating livelihood opportunities, increasing poverty, and a constriction of educational and health care opportunities. Persistent human rights abuses thus foster the economic pressures fuelling the continuing migration of rural communities in Dooplaya District to refugee camps in Thailand and towards livelihood opportunities at urban centres in Burma and Thailand. This report examines the situation of abuse in Dooplaya District from January to June 2008..."
Source/publisher: Karen Human Rights Group Field Reports (KHRG #2008-F8)
2008-07-11
Date of entry/update: 2009-11-01
[field_licence]
Type: Individual Documents
Language: English
Local URL:
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