A/HRC/21/60
I. Introduction
1.
The Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent held its eleventh
session from 30 April to 4 May 2012 at the United Nations Office at Geneva. It was
attended by members Monorama Biswas, Mireille Fanon Mendes-France, Mirjana
Najcevska, Maya Sahli and Verene Shepherd.
2.
The participants in the session of the Working Group of Experts included
representatives of Member States, the Holy See, international organizations, regional
organizations, non-governmental organizations and invited panellists (see annex II).
II. Organization of the session
A.
Opening of the session
3.
The outgoing Chairperson-Rapporteur, Mirjana Najcevska, opened the eleventh
session and introduced the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights for
opening remarks.
4.
In her statement, the High Commissioner welcomed the focus of the eleventh
session on the draft Programme of Action for the Decade for People of African Descent and
stressed that the session was the perfect occasion to consider achievements realized during
the International Year for People of African Descent with a view to setting priorities for
future action. She also noted that several States have recognized the rights of people of
African descent in their national constitutions and domestic legislation and highlighted the
invaluable role that civil society organisations played in the process. She added that
regrettably, despite these advances at all levels, there was still a long way to go before the
full realization of all human rights and fundamental freedoms of people of African descent
was achieved. She observed that racism and racial discrimination, both direct and indirect,
de facto and de jure continued to manifest themselves in inequality and disadvantage and
people of African descent, both descendants of Africans who were displaced to the
Americas during the infamous transatlantic slave trade and more recent migrants who have
journeyed to the Americas, Europe, Asia and within Africa itself, make up some of the
poorest and most marginalized groups. She pointed out that studies and findings by
international and national bodies demonstrate that people of African descent still had
limited access to quality education and health services, housing and social security; they
also experienced discrimination in access to justice. They had a low level of political
participation, both in terms of voting and in occupying political positions and faced new
and emerging challenges, such as displacement, due to threats of armed conflict or largescale industrial development projects.
5.
The High Commissioner noted that the intersectionality between race, socioeconomic status, gender, age and nationality meant that women and girls, children and
young people, persons with disabilities and migrants of African descent experienced
multiple forms of discrimination and face particular challenges to realizing their rights. She
drew particular attention to the plight of young men of African descent, noting that racial
profiling, linked to high rates of police violence, arrests and imprisonment and lack of
access to justice could have fatal consequences. She added that despite the positive
contributions people of African descent have made to the development of their countries,
they remained invisible and undervalued, and pointed out the lack of disaggregated data on
people of African descent. The High Commissioner stated that the proposal for an
International Decade was therefore timely and important and it would be an opportunity to
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