A/58/313
13. In order to contribute to the implementation of the Durban Declaration and
Programme of Action, the Special Rapporteur was an active participant in the
following meetings organized by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO):
• Regional consultation for Africa on the topic of “Africa and the scourge of
racism, discrimination and xenophobia: vision and strategy for an effective
follow-up to the Durban Conference”, held in Dakar from 13 to 15 February
2003. This meeting of experts and representatives of the five African
subregions provided an opportunity to discuss the various forms of racism
which threaten African societies, compare experiences of combating these
scourges in Africa and set priorities for UNESCO’s new strategy to combat
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. The
participants stressed that it was also necessary to combat discrimination within
countries inherited from certain cultural traditions, such as the caste system,
and new forms of discrimination such as the stigmatization of people infected
with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the rise of xenophobia in
Africa, as demonstrated by recent conflicts.
• Regional consultation for Europe on the topic of “Combating racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in Europe”, held in
Moscow on 20 and 21 March 2003. Participants discussed the role of States in
that struggle; model legislative, administrative and legal mechanisms to be
introduced; statistical indicators to be developed in order to better assess the
prevalence of discrimination; and the type of partnership to be developed
between Governments and non-governmental organizations working in the
area of human rights, especially in the “new democracies” of Europe. During
that consultation, the Special Rapporteur placed particular emphasis on two
key factors in the problem of racism in Europe: on the one hand, the overriding
influence on attitudes, the imagination and perceptions exercised by deeply
rooted remnants of the scorn for other peoples’ cultures which provided the
ideological legitimation of colonization; and, on the other, the rise of new
forms of legal, social, cultural and economic discrimination against foreigners,
refugees and immigrants, partly as a result of political and media pressure
from xenophobic political parties.
• International expert seminar on the topic of renewed efforts to combat racism,
racial discrimination and intolerance, held in Osaka, Japan, on 4 and 5 June
2003. This meeting brought together experts who had participated in the
Durban process and in the various regional consultations organized by
UNESCO and/or the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
(OHCHR), and the authors of UNESCO studies on various aspects of racial
discrimination and xenophobia. Its purpose was to endorse the results of those
studies and to discuss the new UNESCO strategy in that area, an outline of
which was submitted to the participants for comments and suggestions. The
Special Rapporteur presented to the seminar a study on the cultural identity
and education of people of African descent and drew attention to the numerous
reports which he had received concerning acts of discrimination against
Africans in some Asian countries.
14. During his visit to Japan, the Special Rapporteur had the opportunity to learn
about the economic, social, cultural and educational situation of the Buraku
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