Chapter II sets out achievements in this area, including the Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict and increasing support for the Declaration of Commitment to End Sexual Violence in Conflict, and our plans to address the myriad challenges that remain.Ĭhapter III focuses on the FCO’s programme and project work on human rights, with case studies on each of our priority areas, and the steps we have taken to mainstream human rights across the FCO network. It describes what the UK is doing to support human rights defenders, including through the EU, particularly in Afghanistan.Ģ014 was an important year for our Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative (PSVI), marking two years since its launch. It sets out how the UK has worked through the UN and features case studies on Eastern Europe and Central Asia, and Burma. Chapter I focuses on the protection of civil society space and those who defend it. One of the most striking trends of 2014 was the pressure put by governments on civil society organisations in many parts of the world, damaging human rights and the economic interests of those same countries. It reviews the situation in specific countries and against the thematic priorities around which our work is organised. This report provides a UK perspective on the global human rights situation during 2014, and examples of what the government is doing to promote human rights and democratic values overseas.
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