A/HRC/4/19
page 18
seeking confirmation of those statements, and any responses or measures taken in the light of the
relevant international instruments. The Government of the Niger, whose country was explicitly
implicated, announced its intention to bring the matter before the French courts. At the time of
writing this report, Mr. Frêche remains head of the Languedoc-Roussillon regional council and
Mr. Sevran continues to work as a presenter on a State television channel. In future reports, the
Special Rapporteur intends to address the profound significance of this worrying trend towards
the trivialization and intellectual legitimization of racism in the resurgence of racism and
xenophobia.
D. Racism, discrimination and xenophobia at points of entry,
and in reception and waiting areas
46.
The Special Rapporteur remains alarmed at the racist and xenophobic treatment, in many
countries, of asylum-seekers, refugees and immigrants in waiting areas, particularly airports,
ports and stations, which is an indication that racism, discrimination and xenophobia are on the
rise. As a result of the overriding focus on combating terrorism, the treatment of non-citizens,
immigrants, refugees and asylum-seekers is characterized by suspicion, mistrust, fear that they
may be dangerous, and by cultural and religious hostility. Such sentiments result in the
widespread implementation of national policies that tend to restrict the economic and social
rights (housing, education, health) of these communities and thus illustrate that the political
primacy of security over the law brings about a decline in human rights.
47.
Such policies are first applied at the points of entry to a country (airports, ports, borders):
widespread use of discriminatory measures, such as targeting people because of their ethnic,
cultural or religious appearance, systematic and humiliating searches, refoulement, separate
counters for citizens and foreigners, and excessively long queues at counters for foreigners. In
this regard, human rights organizations report that waiting areas for asylum-seekers and persons
who have been refused entry have become “no-rights zones”, characterized, inter alia, by a lack
of access - or difficult access - to redress and defence, by physical and verbal violence of a racist
nature on the part of law enforcement officers, by cramped conditions and lack of privacy, the
absence or lack of minimum conditions of hygiene, and by the absence or inadequacy of
measures to protect women and children. The alarming number and seriousness of the violent
incidents caused by such conditions, as well as the conditions in which persons in such places are
expelled and returned, justifies the need to pay special attention to this resurgent form of
discrimination and racism. These conditions, which the Special Rapporteur has already
denounced in previous reports (see E/CN.4/2006/16, paras. 39-43), remain a source of concern.
Human rights organizations and associations have denounced the appalling conditions in the
aforementioned places on several occasions.
E. Racism and sport
48.
The Special Rapporteur continued to consider the issue of racism in sport in his interim
report to the General Assembly at its sixty-first session (A/61/335), pursuant to Assembly
resolution 60/144, in which the Assembly expressed its concern “at the increasing incidence
of racism in various sporting events” and invited Member States “to demonstrate greater