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page 8
economic and strategic interests. Its policies towards Israel, the
Philippines and China were guided by strategic concerns. As for Mexican
immigrants, the opening up of the North American market under the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the opportunity to put
pressure on wages made them particularly attractive to United States
employers. Nowadays interest is focusing on the 'brain drain', on those
highly qualified in the arts, culture and science. The confluence of all
these interests has led the United States gradually to increase the overall
quota, and that does not include the high proportion of illegal immigration
into the country. This policy has also been accompanied by particularly
repressive measures against Mexican nationals and those working in the
maquiladora industry and in free zones.”
21.
The record of proceedings of this seminar and its conclusions and
recommendations are available for consultation at the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva.
B.
Cotonou Seminar on all forms of discrimination (June 1997)
22.
As part of the activities of the Institute for Human Rights and the
Promotion of Democracy (“Democracy in daily life”), which he established in
his home country (Benin), the Special Rapporteur organized an international
meeting of experts on “all forms of discrimination based on race, nationality,
ethnic origin, religion or belief or any other factors in Africa south of the
Sahara” in Cotonou on 5 and 6 June 1997, with financial assistance from the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
The meeting focused on the following subjects: (1) problem areas in the field
of discrimination in all its forms in Black Africa; (2) relations between
ethnic groups in the Sahel countries; (3) the problems of ethnicity,
nationalities and relations between ethnic groups in Central Africa,
particularly in the Great Lakes region; (4) discrimination against women and
children: the case of Benin (Vidomegons); (5) relations between the peoples
of the Gulf of Benin and members of the non-African communities (Europeans,
Lebanese, Syrians, Indians, Pakistanis, etc.). The final report of the
meeting is available at the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights. In the context of the forthcoming World Conference on Racism
and Xenophobia, meetings of this kind should be organized at the subregional
and regional levels in other parts of the world.
C.
Seminar on the Internet and racism
23.
The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights organized a
seminar on “The role of the Internet in the light of the provisions of the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination” in Geneva, from 10 to 14 November 1997. Several papers were
presented on that occasion on topics which included: (1) racism and racial
discrimination on the Internet; (2) prohibition of racist propaganda on the
Internet: juridical aspects (national and international measures);
(3) technical aspects of screening racist propaganda on the Internet (national
and international measures) and (4) elements relating to conduct and good
practice for Internet-based materials. The summary records of the seminar,
together with its conclusions and recommendations, are available at the Office
of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.