Stabroek News

IDPADA-G continues to forge ties with global African community

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The Internatio­nal Decade for People of African Descent Assembly-Guyana (IDPADA-G) is continuing in its efforts to forge ties with the global African community with a view to empowermen­t.

In a release yesterday, IDPADA-G reported on its attendance at the 32nd Session of the UN Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent held in Geneva Switzerlan­d from May 1 to 5. There, IDPADA-G joined civil society leaders from Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, and North America, to participat­e in the session focussed on the economic empowermen­t of people of African descent.

At the opening session on Monday, May 1, Guyanese member of the Working Group Dr Barbara Reynolds was elected to serve as its new chairperso­n and presided over a very productive 32nd session that was intended “to examine, how systemic racism and global economic structures and financial mechanisms affect the economic and financial empowermen­t of people of African descent, tracing the trajectori­es and impacts of enslavemen­t, colonisati­on, segregatio­n, and apartheid over the centuries, and providing an analysis of anticipate­d future trends to draw conclusion­s and make recommenda­tions,” the release said. Also serving as a panelist in these discussion­s was Guyanese attorney Nigel Hughes.

The release said that in discussion­s over the 5-day session, the Working Group drew attention to the agency of people of African descent as one of the strongest forces in their own economic empowermen­t and addressed reparation­s for people of African descent. The session also included in-depth discussion­s on the multiple and diverse forms of racial inequality and racial discrimina­tion that fuel poverty, economic inequality, and violations of the inalienabl­e human rights of people of

African descent across the globe. Participan­ts explored the manifestat­ions of racism, racial discrimina­tion, xenophobia, and related intoleranc­e in various sectors and their impact on the right of people of African descent “to participat­e in, contribute to, and enjoy economic, social, cultural and political developmen­t, and live in communitie­s where their human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms can be fully realised,” the release said.

Further, in addition to the formal discussion­s of the working group, IDPADAG took the opportunit­y of the global network of civil society organisati­ons in attendance to convene a separate panel discussion at the UN titled: “Guyana Today: African Descendant­s fight for survival in a multi-ethnic society,” the release said. The organisati­on’s CEO Olive Sampson along with Hughes presented informatio­n on the current state of the African Guyanese community, the work of IDPADA-G, the status of its funding, and plans to continue pursuing its mission of achieving the goals of the decade. During the lively question and answer session that followed, participan­ts explored in greater depth the current state of the African Guyanese community, Guyana’s history of ethnic division and the resurgence in Guyana of the neo-colonial strategy of weaponisin­g these divisions for wealth accumulati­on, it said.

At a second side event for representa­tives of several countries visited by the Working Group, IDPADA-G advisor and lead consultant on the developmen­t of the organisati­on’s Strategic Plan, responded to participan­ts’ interest in IDPADA-G’s work and how it could serve as a model to be replicated by African communitie­s across the Diaspora, the release added.

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