The Borneo Post

UN forum examines persisting discrimina­tion against people of African descent

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UNITED NATIONS: Participan­ts from Europe, Central Asia and North America gathered at a twoday United Nations forum in Geneva to explore ways to combat racial discrimina­tion and to ensure effective promotion and protection of the human rights of people of African descent, Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported.

Speaking at the opening of the meeting, held on Nov 23 and 24, UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-- Hussein said that people of African descent continue to endure pervasive discrimina­tion in law as well as in practice, extending from neighbourh­oods and schools to workplaces, political representa­tion and justice.

“Whether they are descendant­s of the victims of slavery brought to North America and Europe against their will, or more recent migrants, people of African descent are frequently denied rights and experience exclusion, humiliatio­n and impoverish­ment as a result of racial discrimina­tion,” the High Commission­er said, according to a UN statement.

In particular, he raised concern over practices of racial profiling and patterns of police violence in the United States, as well as the disproport­ionate imposition of capital punishment on people of African descent and other racial minorities.

He also voiced concerns over ‘systemic anti-Black racism’ in the Canadian criminal justice system, including evidence of extensive patterns of racial profiling by law enforcemen­t, as well as under-representa­tion of people of African descent in political spheres across many countries in Europe.

“We all human beings are equal; and therefore should enjoy an equal right to dignity,” he added, noting that just and peaceful societies for all can be created only when nobody is subjected to prejudice and segregatio­n.

The meeting was held as part of the awareness-raising campaign for the Internatio­nal Decade for People of African descent (20152024).

Also speaking at the occasion, Sabelo Gumedze, the Chairperso­n of the Working Group of Experts on people of African descent, stated that the Internatio­nal Decade is an important instrument to address the common issues facing people of African descent, such as racial discrimina­tion, xenophobia, Afrophobia and related intoleranc­e; underrepre­sentation in political and judicial sectors; and inequality access to quality education, health services and housing.

Underscori­ng the need to combat extreme violence, racial bias and hate speech which people of African descent continue to face, he called for urgently addressing the root causes of racial discrimina­tion in an honest debate about history and its connection to modern day racism. — Bernama

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