A/HRC/7/36
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33. One of the first steps mentioned in addressing the issue should be the start of negotiations
with the International Federation of Journalists for the creation of a code of conduct to be
followed by the media.
34. There was also mention of the negative portrayal of black women in the media, which
contributed to their being victims of violence. There was further mention of youths of African
descent being portrayed as criminals by the media in Latin America, and it was suggested that
there should be an alternative to portraying adolescents only as rappers and potential sports
players. There is no portrayal of them as having the potential to be professionals.
35. One member of the panel stated that ownership of the media was concentrated in fewer and
fewer hands; that could be one of the major causes for the negative portrayal of people of
African descent. The Durban review process could be an opportunity to open a frank dialogue
with the media regarding how people of African descent were portrayed by them.
36. Regarding alternative media, such as the Internet, it was stated that they were very
important as most youths had access to alternative media and actively communicate using them.
The Working Group and OHCHR were challenged to take advantage of alternative media
outlets, such as YouTube, during the Durban review process, to encourage young people to
participate in its activities over the Internet and other alternative media channels.
37. This was followed by mention of the absence of quantity and quality of reporting on
people of African descent; the issues that are particularly important to people of African descent
were being ignored, and there was a surplus of reporting that showed people of African descent
in a bad light. The Durban Review Conference would be an excellent opportunity to end the
invisibility of the Durban process. There was substantive coverage of the Durban Conference
in 2001, but the tragedy of 9/11 had the effect of wiping the Durban agenda off the world’s
conscience.
38. One observer stressed that it would be imperative to have a mixture of binding and
voluntary measures to be taken and implemented by the media. There was a view of false
reporting as a growing problem that threatened international peace and progress.
39. The international legal framework, it was stated, was conceived shortly after genocide in
Europe, where there had been an abundance of incitement to racial and religious hatred. As a
result of time and increased freedom of expression, people had forgotten that dark chapter of
history. The threshold should be lowered to tackle incidences of incitement to racial and
religious hatred. The media, it was further stated, was currently not subject to scrutiny, as there
were no effective media watchdogs. There was a difference between freedom of expression and
freedom of opinion; while the right to holding an opinion was absolute, that of expression was
not, if it implied infringing on the enjoyment of others of their specific rights.
40. Mr. Frans, expert of the Working Group on People of African Descent, mentioned that
the Western media dominated and financial and technical wealth determined what was reported
and exported to the rest of the world. He mentioned that most studies had shown that the
international news flow was still controlled by only a handful of newsagents. That, he believed,