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human rights
[hyoo-muhn rahyts, yoo‑]
plural noun
fundamental rights, especially those believed to belong to an individual and in whose exercise a government may not interfere, as the rights to speak, associate, work, etc.
human rights
plural noun
the rights of individuals to liberty, justice, etc
human rights
Freedom from arbitrary interference or restriction by governments. The term encompasses largely the same rights called civil liberties or civil rights but often suggests rights that have not been recognized.
Word History and Origins
Origin of human rights1
Example Sentences
Legal experts told BBC Verify the strike may have violated international human rights and maritime law.
President Prabowo himself is accused of human rights abuses, such as the abduction of dissidents, under Suharto’s rule.
Swinney described as "dreadful" Reform's proposal to take the UK out of the European Convention on Human Rights, a treaty designed to protect human rights and political freedoms,
A number of international human rights groups have concluded that Israel is already operating an apartheid system in the West Bank - a characterisation that the Israeli government has rejected.
"We don't want Canada to be complicit in this treatment, and the potential result that they could be sent to any number of countries with their own abysmal human rights record," he tells the BBC.
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