Minority Rights Group International
Agenda item 3: Minorities and the exercise of police powers.
Mr. Chairperson, distinguished delegates:
Minority victims of crimes face many obstacles when approaching the police.
Police killings of African-American men and campaigns such as
#BlackLivesMatter have shone a spotlight on discriminatory attitudes among
US law enforcement personnel. African-American men are 21 times more
likely to be killed by police in the United States than their non-Latino white
counterparts. Whenever criminal proceedings against the officers involved are
closed (as happened in the cases of Michael Brown and Eric Garner), this leads
to severe doubts among African-American victims of crimes that their own
cases will ever be treated seriously.
The US government must urgently do more to tackle these issues, especially
given the International Decade on Persons of African Descent.
Police officers may also lack the skills and training to carry out their
investigations appropriately, especially when the victim is a minority woman
or girl. Attitudes of stigma – among police, within the minority community or
even the family – may indeed prevent minority women victims from ever filing
a complaint.
Minority victims of crimes may also fear that their complaints may lead to
negative repercussions. Meskhetian Turks in Russia who were victims of
ethnically motivated attacks did not report these instances to the police – due
to fear of reprisals. Such hesitancy becomes worse when police officers have
been themselves implicated in hate crimes, for instance in Greece.