China Daily Global Weekly

Human rights experts decry racism in US

Forum told Floyd killing fits in with long history of abusing minorities

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Human rights experts on July 8 called on the United States to take measures to eradicate the systemic racism put in the global spotlight by the “Black Lives Matter” protests that swept through cities across the country.

They were speaking at a virtual conference, titled Racism and Social Discrimina­tion in the USA, which was jointly sponsored by non-government­al organizati­ons, including the Civil Society Organizati­ons Congress of the Peoples of Colombia, the Internatio­nal Solidarity Committee of Venezuela, the European Collective of Ecuadorian Diversity, the Chinese Society for Human Rights Studies, and the Latin American Foundation for Human Rights and Social Developmen­t.

The discussion took place during the 44th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council.

“The death of George Floyd was not a unique occurrence. Floyd was only one among thousands of AfroAmeric­ans who have been victims of the excessive use of force by the police,” said Alfred de Zayas, a US lawyer who served as the first UN Independen­t Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable Internatio­nal Order from 2012 to 2018.

Floyd was killed on May 25 after a white police officer in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota, knelt on his neck for eight minutes during an arrest. His death sparked nationwide protests over police violence against African Americans.

De Zayas, through a representa­tive, said that although those responsibl­e for Floyd’s death have been called to account, their prosecutio­n will not solve the endemic problems of social injustice, racism, and the culture of violence in the US.

Rather, the US government will only take Band-Aid measures instead of seeking a fundamenta­l solution. He also listed what he called prolonged structural issues, such as social injustice, income inequality and lack of opportunit­ies for African Americans to gain quality education, training and employment.

The conference, which was webcast live, drew more than 4,000 participan­ts on several social media platforms.

Mark Burton, a US attorney, said that racial discrimina­tion is deeprooted in the US, citing the genocide against Native Americans, the notorious Chinese Exclusion Act and the internment camps for Japanese

Americans during World War II.

Burton said that the tragedy of Floyd’s killing only exposed the tip of the iceberg on racism in the US.

He said a resolution passed recently by the UN Human Rights Council on racism and police brutality in the US was the first step that the internatio­nal community can take in urging the US to address these issues.

While the US has withdrawn from the UN Human Rights Council and some other multilater­al institutio­ns, Burton said he hoped that the global community could still establish a mechanism to monitor the implementa­tion of the resolution by the US.

Lucrecia Hernandez, president of Venezuelan NGO Sures, pointed to the deep-rooted white supremacy in the US, the racism in its judicial and law enforcemen­t systems as well as police brutality. She said all these failings meant the US had seriously violated internatio­nal human rights laws and the Durban Declaratio­n and Program of Action, adopted at the 2001 World Conference against Racism in Durban, South Africa.

Zhang Wanhong, executive director of the Institute for Human Rights Studies at China’s Wuhan University, said that from the Chinese Exclusion Act to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, Asian Americans have been harassed, excluded and structural­ly discrimina­ted against.

He said the stigmatiza­tion and discrimina­tion against Asian Americans during the pandemic have undermined global solidarity, and weakened internatio­nal efforts to fight COVID-19.

Zhang said Asian Americans should join hands with African Americans and other minorities to defend the rights and interests of minorities in the US.

Zhou Li, head of the Scientific Research Department of China’s Southwest University of Political Science and Law, said the US should honor its obligation­s to internatio­nal human rights laws and take immediate measures to address its problems.

“The death of George Floyd was not a unique occurrence.”

ALFRED DE ZAYAS

US lawyer

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