E/CN.4/1996/72/Add.4
page 9
36.
However, some think that insufficient attention is paid to cultural
diversity, that the national curriculum continues to overemphasize British
and Christian culture and that teachers do not receive adequate training in
nonracist attitudes that could facilitate their relations with students from
ethnic minorities. Many such students have problems in school because English
is not their mother tongue. The special courses organized for them have not
yet achieved the desired results, and recruitment of bilingual teachers
remains insufficient.
37.
There is a strong trend towards academic failure among children and
adolescents from ethnic minorities, particularly in the Afro-Caribbean and
Bangladeshi communities, perhaps as a result of problems present in those
communities (the break-up of families, tension between the traditional and
British cultures, parental unemployment and poverty), but also because the
school environment is hostile to them and teachers may be prejudiced against
them. For example, Afro-Caribbean children and adolescents are often
considered to be undisciplined and to have little interest in school and, as
a result, are marginalized and excluded for the slightest act of misbehaviour.
38.
Many young Blacks leave school with a low level of education and without
qualifications, only to add to the relatively high numbers of unemployed among
ethnic communities.
39.
Students from ethnic minorities may also be psychologically affected by
racist harassment from their fellow-students to the point that their studies
suffer in consequence.
40.
Even members of ethnic minorities with excellent school records find it
difficult to obtain employment, particularly during the current period of job
scarcity. Whereas the unemployment rate in 1993 was an estimated 9.5 per cent
for Whites, it was 37.3 per cent for Africans, 30 per cent for Pakistanis,
27.7 per cent for Bangladeshis, 25 per cent for Afro-Caribbeans and
15 per cent for Indians.
41.
Many qualified members of ethnic minorities are obliged to do manual
labour or take unskilled jobs (cleaners, security guards, taxi drivers, etc.)
or are confined to subordinate positions during their entire career in, for
example, the public services. A recent Health Department report
7/ notes that
racism and racial discrimination are widespread in the health services and
that supervisors are reluctant to implement equal opportunity policies,
preferring to promote white nurses rather than their black colleagues.
E.
Housing discrimination
42.
In the public or semi-public sector controlled by the Housing
Council, certain practices may be considered discriminatory. Immigrant or
ethnic-minority families, most of which are large, wait longer than others
before receiving housing and are initially given dilapidated apartments. In
some cases, ethnic concentration is encouraged by administrative officials
particularly keen to minimize racial harassment and violence against minority
groups.