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Hansa Mehta’s Women’s Rights Legacy Inspires Safeguards in AI Era: UNGA President Annalena Baerbock
March 8, 2026 by Mediaeye News
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Hansa Mehta’s Women’s Rights Legacy Inspires Safeguards in AI Era: UNGA President Annalena Baerbock

United Nations: Highlighting India’s pioneering human rights champion, Hansa Mehta, Annalena Baerbock said her historic fight for women’s recognition will continue to motivate global efforts to safeguard women’s rights in the era of artificial intelligence.

“We should be reminded every day when we are working on these new AI regulations to hold our stand firmly, as Hansa Mehta once did,” Baerbock has said.

Mehta is credited with rewriting the first article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights from a male-centric version that spoke of only men to “All human beings are born free and equal,” making it inclusive of women.

Speaking at the annual Hansa Mehta Memorial lecture sponsored by India’s UN Mission, Baerbock said, “Her legacy lives on in the foundational principles she helped etch into the Universal Declaration of Human Rights”.

When, as a member of the Commission on Human Rights in 1949, Mehta demanded the change from “all men” to “all human beings”, “they were frankly dismissive”, she said.

“She persisted until she secured a formulation that was unambiguous”, and that was “a small change on the page but one with monumental consequences”, Baerbock said.

This year’s theme of the lecture was “Breaking barriers for Social Transformation: Dr. Hansa Mehta’s inspiring life”.

Baerbock said, “Advances in digital technology and Artificial Intelligence promise transformation, yet women remain less likely to have equal access to digital tools.”

Moreover, these technologies are being used to target women, she said, pointing out that “96 per cent of non-consensual deepfake pornography depicts women”.

“We should be reminded every day when we are working on these new AI regulations to hold our stand firmly, as Hansa Mehta once did,” Baerbock said.

Therefore, she added, it was fitting that “India’s hosting of the second AI Impact Summit, which reflects a commitment to harnessing these technologies for inclusive and equitable development”.

“If just a single person can make such an immense difference, imagine how profoundly a society can transform when that opportunity is extended to all humanity”, she said.

Mehta was one of only 15 women in the Constituent Assembly of India that was responsible for drafting the Constitution.

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MediaEye Group

Caption: India’s human rights pioneer Hansa Mehta, left, while serving on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, is seen with the body’s chairperson Eleanor Roosevelt in 1949 (File Photo: UN)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

–IANS

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