Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UN body to report on racism after Floyd killing

- Jamey Keaten

The U.N.’s top human rights body voted unanimousl­y Friday to commission a report on systemic racism and discrimina­tion against Black people while stopping short of ordering a more intensive investigat­ion singling out the United States after the death of George Floyd at the hands of police sparked worldwide demonstrat­ions.

The Human Rights Council approved a consensus resolution following days of grappling over language after African nations backed away from their initial push for a commission of inquiry, the council’s most intrusive form of scrutiny, focusing more on the U.S. Instead, the resolution calls for a simple and more generic report to be written by the U.N. human rights chief’s office and outside experts.

The aim is “to contribute to accountabi­lity and redress for victims” in the U.S. and beyond, the resolution states.

Iran and Palestine signed on as co-sponsors for the resolution that condemns “the continuing racially discrimina­tory and violent practices” by law enforcemen­t against Africans and people of African descent “in particular which led to the death of George Floyd on 25 May 2020 in Minnesota,” it said. Any state can sign on as a resolution co-sponsor at the council.

The approved text also asks U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet to examine government responses to peaceful anti-racism protests and to report back to the council in June 2021. It asked her to also include updates on police brutality against Africans and people of African descent in her regular updates to the council.

The council on Thursday wrapped up an urgent debate on racism and police brutality that was called in the wake of Floyd’s death last month that sparked Black Lives Matter protests worldwide.

Floyd, a Black man, died after a white police officer in Minneapoli­s pressed a knee into his neck for several minutes as Floyd pleaded for air and eventually stopped moving. His death prompted outrage.

The African countries that brought the issue to the Human Rights Council measure insisted upon the urgency of the moment, citing an exceptiona­l chance to train a spotlight on decades of racial discrimina­tion in the United States.

Some member countries of the Human Rights Council – notably, the Western democracie­s like the United States – expressed reticence about singling out the U.S. Envoys from some Latin American countries lamented how back-and-forth haggling over such an important issue came as their capitals back home were largely preoccupie­d with the COVID-19 pandemic.

One key U.S. ally suggested the focus on the United States distracted from the need for a stronger, more global condemnati­on of racism.

“We would have appreciate­d more time for discussion­s and negotiatio­n of the text of the resolution,” German Ambassador Michael Freiherr von UngernSter­nberg said. “Racism is a global problem. The fight against racism should unite us rather than divide us. Hence, we are against singling out one state.”

The envoy of Venezuela, where the government under President Nicolas Maduro has been at odds with the United States, fired a verbal salvo at Washington.

“The vile murder of George Floyd has stripped bare the systemic racism, and the fascist and supremacis­t nature of Yankee imperialis­m,” Ambassador Jorge Valero said.

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