Sambhali Trust Urges Real Human Rights Action at UN, Highlights India's Efforts

At the 61st UN Human Rights Council session, Sambhali Trust advocated for human rights to be a practical, cross-cutting principle in all governance. Representative Hansraj Singh emphasized the need for political will and highlighted India's rights-based welfare schemes as examples of institutional commitment. He shared the trust's grassroots work in Rajasthan, using a rights-based framework to empower marginalized women and children. The intervention called for stronger collaboration between governments and civil society to translate global commitments into local reality.

Key Points: UNHRC Session: Sambhali Trust Calls for Rights Integration

  • Embed rights in policy & governance
  • Need political will & community engagement
  • Highlight India's welfare programs
  • Grassroots work in Rajasthan
  • Gov-civil society collaboration
2 min read

Sambhali Trust calls for deeper human rights integration at 61st UNHRC session

At the UN Human Rights Council, Sambhali Trust stressed moving beyond theory to embed human rights in policy and praised India's welfare schemes.

"human rights mainstreaming should not remain a theoretical or symbolic commitment - Hansraj Singh"

Geneva, February 25

At the 61st Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council, Sambhali Trust addressed the Annual High-Level Panel Discussion on Human Rights Mainstreaming, stressing the importance of embedding human dignity, equality, and justice across governance and development processes.

Representing the organisation, Hansraj Singh stated that human rights mainstreaming should not remain a theoretical or symbolic commitment, but must function as a cross-cutting principle integrated into policies, institutions, and implementation frameworks. He emphasised that translating human rights commitments into measurable outcomes requires sustained political will, institutional alignment, and community-level engagement.

During his intervention, Singh highlighted India's efforts to institutionalise human rights through constitutional guarantees, rights-based legislation, and expansive welfare programmes. He cited initiatives such as Mission Vatsalya, POSHAN Abhiyaan, Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, and digital inclusion programmes as examples of measures aimed at embedding equity, access, and accountability across sectors. According to him, these programmes collectively reach hundreds of millions of citizens and contribute to strengthening inclusive governance and social justice.

Drawing from Sambhali Trust's grassroots experience in Rajasthan, Singh explained how human rights mainstreaming operates in practice. The organisation works with marginalised women and children, approaching education, shelter, livelihoods, healthcare, and access to justice through a rights-based framework that places dignity, participation, and accountability at its core. He noted that Sambhali Trust also actively engages in local boards and advisory platforms, contributing to decision-making processes at the community and local government levels to ensure that human rights principles guide governance and service delivery.

The intervention underscored the broader message that effective human rights mainstreaming requires collaboration between governments and civil society. By aligning policy frameworks with on-the-ground realities, organisations such as Sambhali Trust aim to bridge the gap between global commitments and local implementation, reinforcing the role of inclusive and accountable governance in advancing human rights.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Singh ji made some excellent points. Schemes like PM Awas Yojana and POSHAN Abhiyaan are indeed massive efforts. But the real challenge is on-ground implementation and ensuring benefits reach the last person in the queue. Hope the UN session leads to more actionable collaboration.
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Aman W
While I appreciate the sentiment, sometimes these high-level talks feel disconnected from reality. We have strong laws on paper, but daily life for many marginalized communities is still a struggle for basic dignity. The trust's work is commendable, but we need systemic change, not just speeches.
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Sarah B
Interesting read. As someone working in international development, the bridge between global commitments and local implementation is the toughest part. Sambhali Trust's model of engaging with local boards seems like a practical way to embed rights into governance.
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Karthik V
Proud moment for Indian civil society! Our constitution provides a strong foundation for human rights. It's good to see examples like Mission Vatsalya being highlighted on a world stage. More power to organizations working silently at the grassroots level.
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Nisha Z
The emphasis on 'sustained political will' is the key takeaway for me. Schemes come and go with governments. We need institutions and a culture that upholds dignity and justice regardless of who is in power. Education and awareness are the first steps.

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