CONCLUSION
the Millennium Development Goals enjoy the status of customary international law and
are thus binding on all governments. Alston, P. A Human Rights Perspective on the
Millennium Development Goals, paper prepared as part as a contribution to the work of
the Millennium Project Task Force on Poverty and Economic Development. The work of
the Task Force is available at: www.unmillenniumproject.org.
10
The current mandate is ‘to consider options regarding the elaboration of an optional
protocol and not actually to begin drafting’. CHR Res. 2003/18, para. 13, see also, the
Report of the open-ended Working-Group to consider options regarding the elaboration
of an optional protocol to ICESCR, UN doc. E/CN.4/2004/44.
11
See further, Report of the Expert’s Roundtable Concerning Issues Central to the
Proposed Optional Protocol to the ICESCR, International Commission of Jurists, Sept.
2002. Available at: www.icj.org
12
For useful information on the benefits of, inter alia, a complaints mechanism under
ICESCR see, The Coalition for an Optional Protocol to ICESCR, Advocacy Kit, 2004.
Available at: www.nwjc.org.au/avcwl/lists/info/op-icescr.html.
13
For information and recent developments related to the establishment of the African
Court see www.interights.org
14
ACHPR resolution on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Africa, adopted at the 36th
Ordinary Session, 2004; see also the Workshop Statement on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights in Africa, Sept. 2004 (www.interights.org) which informed the
Commission’s resolution.
15
See generally, CESCR General Comment No. 9 on the Domestic Application of the
Covenant, UN doc. E/C.12/1998/24. See further, CESCR Concluding Observations on
Kuwait, UN doc. E/C.12/1/Add.98, 2004, para. 27; CESCR Concluding Observations on
Ecuador, 2004, op.cit., para. 59; CESCR Concluding Observations on Moldova, UN doc.
E/C.12/1/Add.91, 2003, para. 30; CESCR Concluding Observations on Trinidad and
Tobago, UN doc. E/C.12/1/Add.80, 2002, paras. 9, 32.
16
CRC Concluding Observations on Brazil, UN doc. CRC/C/15/Add.241, 2004, paras. 20,
21, 23 where reference is made in particular to children of African descent and indigenous children.
17
See Beijing +5 Outcome document, UN doc. A/S-23/10/Rev.1 (SUPPL. NO. 3 para. 93(d).
‘… Governments, regional and international organizations, including the United Nations
system, and international financial institutions and other actors … Undertake appropriate
data collection and research on indigenous women, with their full participation, in order
to foster accessible, culturally and linguistically appropriate policies, programmes and
services’. ; see also Banda, F. and Chinkin, C., Gender, Minorities and Indigenous Peoples,
London, Minority Rights Group International, 2004.
18
The HRC noted in Ilmari Lansmann v. Finland: ‘A State may understandably wish to
encourage development or allow economic activity by enterprises. The scope of its
freedom to do so is not to be assessed by reference to a margin of appreciation, but by
99