E/CN.4/2002/24
page 7
From 3 to 5 September, he took part in the parallel meeting entitled “Voices of victims”, where
he heard poignant accounts from victims of anti-Semitism in Austria and of murderous racist
violence against persons of African origin in Colombia.
6.
The Special Rapporteur drew the following lessons from the Durban Conference:
(a)
Durban was the culmination of a long process - filled with pitfalls and critical
moments - that enabled the international community to achieve reconciliation by acknowledging
the scourges represented by slavery and the slave trade and classifying them as crimes against
humanity;
(b)
The equal dignity of human beings in all places and at all times, whether based on
religion or reason, was reaffirmed; thus racism and racial discrimination, the products of archaic
thinking, were denounced as obstacles to human progress;
(c)
The dialogue between civilizations proposed provided responses to the problem
of achieving respect for cultural and human diversity, in particular that of accepting difference in
others in the face of dominant societies’ attempts to assimilate other individuals or groups into
their own culture, to exclude them or to eliminate them;
(d)
It was acknowledged that effective action to combat racism and racial
discrimination required a combination of educational, criminal, economic and social measures;
(e)
It was also acknowledged that changing racist mentalities required education,
notably an educational process that noted the evils of racism and racial discrimination while
praising human and cultural diversity and encouraging interpersonal and intercultural exchanges;
(f)
The Durban Declaration and Programme of Action constitute a fundamental
document which should be further developed and implemented without delay in the interest of
mutually-supportive and effective action against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance, through human rights education and economic, social and cultural
development measures designed to correct persistent forms of structural racism and eradicate the
social inequalities which represent the legacy of racism and feed poverty.
B. Participation in the work of the eighth annual meeting
of special rapporteurs/representatives, experts and
chairpersons of working groups of the special procedures
of the Commission on Human Rights and of the advisory
services programme
7.
From 18 to 22 June 2001, the Special Rapporteur participated in the 8th meeting of
special rapporteurs/representatives, experts and chairpersons of working groups of the special
procedures of the Commission on Human Rights. He was elected Chairperson of the meeting,
with Mr. Abid Hussain, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to
freedom of opinion and expression, as Rapporteur. The reader is referred to the report of the
meeting (E/CN.4/2002/14), which has been submitted to the Commission on Human Rights
under items 4 and 18 of the provisional agenda.