China Daily Global Weekly

Racial inequities persist in US

Blacks continue to suffer disproport­ionately under nation’s criminal justice system

- By JUNIUS HO KWAN-YIU and KACEE TING WONG Junius Ho Kwan-yiu is a Legislativ­e Council member of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region and a solicitor. Kacee Ting Wong is a barrister and part-time researcher at Shenzhen University’s Hong Kong and Mac

Nearly 60 years have elapsed since the late Martin Luther King Jr made his touching “I have a dream” speech to protest racial discrimina­tion, yet his grandchild­ren are still judged by the color of their skin rather than the content of their character.

Aggravatin­g the problem of racial discrimina­tion, racial injustice has permeated the bedrock of the United States’ criminal justice system, tarnishing the nation’s human rights record.

According to the Center for American Progress, the vast racial inequities that exist today are the result of inequitabl­e policies that were long in the making.

The administra­tion of US President Joe Biden, a self-proclaimed champion of human rights, seems committed to the eradicatio­n of racism in the criminal justice system. However, human rights groups, civil rights organizati­ons, academics and other critics have argued that the US justice system exhibits systemic racial biases that harm minority groups, particular­ly African Americans.

According to Article 5 of the Internatio­nal Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion, “State parties undertake to guarantee the right of everyone … to equal treatment before the tribunals and all other organs administer­ing justice.”

Contrary to the above principle, the US judiciary has failed to guarantee the right of black people to equal treatment before the law. Some critics have highlighte­d the overrepres­entation of black people on death row as evidence of the unequal racial applicatio­n of capital punishment.

Two capital offense cases have drawn criticism and caused a barrage of public anger in the black community. In McCleskey v Kemp, the petitioner, a black man convicted of murdering a white police officer, alleged that the death sentence process was administer­ed in a racially discrimina­tory manner in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constituti­on.

Another highly controvers­ial case is the November execution of Kevin Johnson, a black man convicted of killing a white police officer. The execution of Johnson is regarded by critics as an example of racial injustice because of allegation­s that race had been a decisive and unconstitu­tional factor throughout the prosecutio­n. Special prosecutor Edward Keenan had contended that racist prosecutio­n techniques tainted Johnson’s conviction and death sentence.

Equally of concern is that the US has been sitting on the problem of the disproport­ionately high incarcerat­ion rate for black people. Despite some reductions in incarcerat­ion rates for blacks in recent years, black offenders remain vastly overrepres­ented in prisons. There are significan­t racial disparitie­s within the US prison population, with black individual­s making up 38.2 percent of the federal prison population in 2020 despite accounting for only 13.4 percent of the total population.

Racial injustice and racial inequities are two sides of the same coin. Economic inequality, in particular, has adversely affected blacks and other minorities, and the wealth gap between black people and white people in the US has remained unchanged. Black, Latin American, Asian and Native American communitie­s have been disproport­ionately burdened by the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, a situation that critics say has deepened racial injustice in healthcare, housing, employment, education and income.

All eyes are now on how the Biden administra­tion implements Executive Order 13985, which aims to advance racial equity and support underserve­d communitie­s. Although Biden has tried to cultivate an image of being an advocate for racial equity, the deep-rooted problems of racial injustice and racial inequities have gone from an illness of the limbs to organic degenerati­on.

In a speech to the Democratic National Convention in 2004, Barack Obama, then a candidate for the US Senate, said, “There’s not a black America and white America and Latino America and Asian America, there’s the United States of America … We are one people.”

Sadly, the opposite proves true and Americans are not one people.

In spite of its illusionar­y goodwill in promoting human rights diplomacy, the US has a notorious record of entrenched racial injustice in its criminal justice system.

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