India Champions Cultural Rights & Heritage Protection at UNHRC 2025 Session

India's evolving role in promoting cultural rights was highlighted at the 61st UN Human Rights Council session. A civil society statement emphasized India's push to treat culture as a public good and a pillar for peace and social cohesion. The intervention detailed India's active participation in global forums like UNESCO Mondiacult 2025, advocating for a dedicated culture goal in the post-2030 development agenda. It also stressed the need to protect artists' rights and address the influence of artificial intelligence on cultural preservation.

Key Points: India's Role in Cultural Rights & Heritage at UNHRC 2025

  • Push for a global culture goal in post-2030 agenda
  • Addressing AI's impact on cultural production
  • Protecting intellectual property for artists
  • Strengthening heritage conservation via UNESCO
  • Fostering culture as a pillar for peace
2 min read

Civil society statement highlights India's expanding role in protecting cultural rights at UNHRC session

India highlights cultural rights, AI's impact on culture, and a global culture goal at the UNHRC, emphasizing heritage protection and artists' rights.

"India's engagement... reflects a rights-based and cooperative approach aimed at strengthening cultural participation, protecting heritage and empowering artists. - Sai Sampath Mettu"

Geneva Marc, h 5

At the 61st session of the United Nations Human Rights Council India's evolving approach toward safeguarding and promoting cultural rights in 2025 was highlighted

A video statement, delivered by Sai Sampath Mettu, the CEO of the ECO FAWN Society, presented during the interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on Cultural Rights highlighted India's efforts to treat culture as both a public good and a vital pillar for promoting peace and social cohesion.

Addressing the dialogue, Mettu emphasised that India's engagement in global cultural discussions reflects a rights-based and cooperative approach aimed at strengthening cultural participation, protecting heritage and empowering artists.

The intervention also acknowledged India's active role at UNESCO Mondiacult 2025, where policymakers and cultural leaders gathered to discuss the future of cultural policies worldwide. During the conference, India raised key issues including cultural rights, the growing influence of artificial intelligence on cultural production and preservation, and the role of culture in fostering peace across societies.

India's push for a dedicated global culture goal within the post-2030 development agenda was also highlighted. According to the statement, such a goal could help integrate cultural sustainability into international policy frameworks while ensuring that cultural diversity and heritage protection remain central to global development priorities.

The intervention further emphasised the importance India places on protecting intellectual property rights for artists and creators. Safeguarding the rights of cultural practitioners, it noted, is essential to sustaining creative ecosystems and ensuring that artists receive recognition and fair compensation for their work.

The statement also recognised India's broader efforts to conserve and promote heritage under the framework of UNESCO, including initiatives aimed at preserving tangible and intangible cultural traditions. These efforts, Mettu noted, demonstrate India's commitment to strengthening international cooperation while expanding access to culture for communities.

Concluding the address, Mettu called for greater collaboration between governments, cultural institutions and civil society to ensure inclusive cultural participation. He also encouraged member states to deepen digital inclusion, strengthen community-led heritage governance and enhance protections for creators in the rapidly evolving cultural landscape.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good initiative, but I hope this isn't just talk. We need to see this translate to ground-level support for our folk artists and weavers. The government must ensure policies actually reach the grassroots.
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Aman W
The point about AI and cultural preservation is crucial. We must use technology to document and promote our diverse traditions, but also protect them from being exploited or misrepresented. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
As someone working in cultural exchange, India's leadership on this is refreshing. A global culture goal in the development agenda is a visionary idea. Culture is not a luxury, it's essential for sustainable development.
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Karthik V
Bharat has always been a cultural superpower. From classical dance forms to diverse languages and festivals, our soft power is immense. Glad to see us taking a proactive role on the world stage. 🙏
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Nikhil C
While the intent is good, I'm skeptical. We have amazing cultural policies on paper, but implementation is weak. How many young people today can name five Indian classical music ragas? We need to focus on cultural education at home first.

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