A/76/302
transmission by 31–68 per cent in Louisiana in the United States, a very hard hit
area. 16 Racial disparities driven by systemic racism demonstrably enhanced the
devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic in Black communities.
36. Vaccine hesitancy, among others, has also resulted in lower rates of vaccinations
among people of African descent who do have access to vaccines. Ironically, although
the science of inoculation in the West originated in the intellectual property of people
of African descent, 17 there are disproportionately low vaccination rates among people
of African descent in some States where vaccines are widely available at present. The
foundations of distrust, including the systematic use of Black bodies for medical
experimentation, 18 offer a powerful example of how systemic racism may redirect
cultural mores.
37. There was also a troubling disregard for intersectional concerns during the
pandemic. For example, restrictions on movement to decrease the number of people
in the streets, reported in Colombia and elsewhere in Latin America, sometimes
mandated movement to certain days on the basis of gender without accounting for
gender identity or gender expression and putting transgender people at particular risk,
a risk that was further enhanced for Afro-Colombians already facing disproportionate
police attention and abuse of authority. In the United Kingdom, online abuse and
harassment increased during the pandemic, particularly among Black women and
non-binary people.
B.
Police violence against people of African descent in the context of
the COVID-19 pandemic
38. As the COVID-19 pandemic raged, and despite the enhanced risk, people of
African descent began experiencing police stops and law enforcement violence at
shocking rates in some States. During the COVID-19 crisis, the enhanced and
sometimes abusive policing of Black bodies and communities, including the
criminalization of children of African descent, has detrimental effects on communities
and families and fosters distrust of law enforcement. 19
39. In several States, human rights institutions reported a rise in violence during
lockdown, quarantine and physical distancing periods mandated as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Incidents of enhanced racial profiling, police violence,
unlawful use of force, and abuse of authority were reported against people of Afric an
descent or in areas with high concentrations of communities of African descent in
Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, the United Kingdom and the United States. In Toronto,
Canada, a 2020 report on racial profiling and racial discrimination of Black persons
by the Toronto Police Service found that Black people were more likely to be
proactively arrested, charged and subjected to use of force in a wide range of police
interactions, and confirmed that Black communities were subjected to a
disproportionate burden of law enforcement in a way consistent with systemic racism
and anti-Black racial bias. 20 Migrants of African descent in Mexico report violence
and abuse by immigration officials and the police, in addition to racism in public
__________________
16
17
18
19
20
12/22
Eugene T. Richardson and others, “Reparations for Black American descendants of persons
enslaved in the U.S. and their potential impact on SARS-CoV-2 transmission”, Social Science &
Medicine, vol. 276, May 2021.
Carey Baraka, “Onesimus: the African slave who taught America how to vaccinate itself from
smallpox”, Quartz, 10 May 2020.
A/HRC/45/44, paras. 53–56.
A/HRC/45/44.
Ontario Human Rights Commission, A Disparate Impact: Second Interim Report on the Inquiry
into Racial Profiling and Racial Discrimination of Black Persons by the Toronto Police Service
(Ontario, 2020).
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