E/CN.4/2004/21
page 14
77.
The observer for Brazil stated that the experts, in diagnosing the problems of violence,
might wish to make stronger connections with the Special Rapporteur on torture and the Special
Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions. The observers for Mexico and
Uruguay agreed, citing the recommendations of the Uruguay workshop and the
recommendations of CERD. Mr. Frans agreed, noting that the Working Group should draw on
previous human rights reports and mechanisms and connect and build on the work of regional
organizations like the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance, the European
Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia and the European Network against Racism.
78.
The observer for the African Society of Comparative and International Law made
three concrete recommendations concerning Martinique: (a) a small commission of experts
should be sent to the Caribbean for an on-site visit; (b) the principle of non-discrimination
(positive actions) should be established for people of African descent in the region; (c) the
bicentenary of the Haitian revolution in 2004 should be commemorated appropriately.
79.
At the ninth meeting, Mr. Kasanda introduced recommendation 27 of the Working Group
concerning “… a study be undertaken on the media and people of African descent that would
focus in part on stereotypes, negative imagery and issues of invisibility. The study should also
focus on how the media makes and can continue to make positive contributions to combating
racial stereotypes and prejudice and to enriching cultural diversity and multicultural societies.”
The Chairperson-Rapporteur introduced the panellists for this theme: Lionel Morrison of the
International Federation of Journalists; Mohammad-Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou of the
International Council on Human Rights Policy; Patrick Gasser of the Union of European
Football Associations; and Boël Sambuc of the Commission fédéral Suisse contre le racisme
(Swiss Federal Commission against Racism).
80.
Mr. Morrison presented his paper entitled “How the media can grasp diversity”
(E/CN.4/2003/WG.20/Misc.12). He explained that the European news media, like much of the
general population, still had to embrace the concept of a multiracial/multicultural society. He
described how the media covered “race” issues through often implicit discourse, the invisibility
of racial minorities, the perception that people of African descent were the source of problems,
and the inability to question or challenge racist ideas. The media sometimes did more than
simply report; it generated, or constructed “racism.” He gave examples in some European
countries to illustrate those issues.
81.
He argued that media had a responsibility and an obligation to combat racism and
xenophobia, and that the absence of voices of people of African descent in the media must be
tackled. He discussed codes of conduct for the media and illustrated the role of the International
Federation of Journalists in trying to address some of those issues.
82.
Mr. Mohamedou presented his paper entitled “Media and the problem of racism”
(E/CN.4/2003/WG.20/Misc.5). He said that the media had a special role to play - primarily by
virtue of the position they occupied in society and their (self-attributed) mission. While there
were serious limitations to the commonality of interests of human rights organizations and media
outlets, the dilemma for human rights organizations was to keep the media interested without
trivializing or sensationalizing the issues they wanted to see aired. Racism was witnessed in the
media in a variety of ways: systemic and/or systematic underrepresentation of groups that
suffered from racism; stereotyping of particular communities and inaccurate representation of