During the Second World War, various authors tried to justify intervention
on behalf of stateless people and nationals persecuted by their own
state, based on the right of intervention according to the so-called "general principles of law recognised by civilised nations" and humanitarian law. It was argued that Germany should pay reparations under international law. One immediate result was the Universal Declaration of Human Rights proclaimed by the United Nations in 1948, in which the connection between being human and having rights was drawn for everyone. They completely violated most of all rights that human have. Just be greatful that the Holocaust is over
There were no human rights in Nazi Germany.
THE HOLOCAUST!!!! In Germany!!! WW2!!!
There is not a superior race. We are all the human race. Hitler was a murderous lunatic.
Because any person deemed not perfect in the eyes of the Nazi's was 'sub-human' and had no rights, not even the right to live.
Most likely. Nazi and Neo-Nazi groups are against the law in most countries because of their racist views and violations of human rights and other discrimination laws.
The Nazi regime violated human rights and civil liberties on a massive scale before the war. Key examples include: harrassing people on the grounds that they might pose a threat to the security of the state (!), imprisonment without trial, systematic brutality towards the prisoners in concentration camps, murdering opponents, banning people from public office on grounds of race, persecuting the Jews and others. Also the practice of making the victims of persecution pay for permission to leave the country was a gross violation of human rights and contrary to natural justice. All this started in 1933 and intensified rapidly. By 1936 the terror apparatus was a very powerful lobby ...
Everyone did, this is why war is a very bad thing. The Nazi's violated peoples human rights a lot but so did the Americans when they killed innocent civilians in the firebombing of Dresden and when they dropped the Atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
There were Red Cross inspectors. (i do not really understand the question - i hope this helps)
To prevent atrocities like those experienced by Jewish people in Nazi Germany
Reflecting back on WWII some of the most atrocious violations of human rights were going on. Wether it was the treatment of Jews in Nazi death camps as a part of the holocaust, the internment of Japanese Americans on American soil, or the occupation and destruction by armed forces human rights were secondary to the primary objective of winning the war.
yes :)
Yes, during World War II, in Nazi Germany, unethical medical experiments were conducted on various groups, including German women. These experiments often involved forced sterilizations aimed at promoting the regime's eugenics policies. Many women were subjected to these procedures without consent, reflecting the broader human rights violations perpetrated by the Nazis. Such actions are now recognized as severe violations of medical ethics and human rights.