A/49/677
English
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electoral defeats inflicted on extreme right-wing parties, as in the case of the
latest German elections, are a response to racial discrimination.
120. Furthermore, many non-governmental organizations and university
institutions are preparing to study the situation of foreigners in general and
of immigrant workers in particular and the manifestations of xenophobia in
Europe to ensure that concerted measures are taken to combat racism and racial
discrimination by promoting tolerance and understanding among the different
communities in Europe. One example is the European Capitals Universities
Network, which has formed a working group at the University of Stockholm to
consider "Universities against racism and xenophobia".
121. Most Governments have taken steps to prevent and combat the phenomena
analysed in this report. There are constitutional provisions, laws and
regulations in this area.
122. On 25 September 1994, Switzerland adopted by referendum an anti-racist law
prohibiting all manifestations of racism, all revisionism and denial of the
Holocaust, and all crimes against humanity. In December 1992, Germany outlawed
several "neo-Nazi rock" songs and groups encouraging racism, genocide and
violence against foreigners. It also prohibited political movements and parties
with racist ideologies that preach xenophobia and engage in violence (for
example, violent attacks on foreigners or the use of incendiary bombs).
Educational programmes that teach tolerance and fight racism and racial
discrimination in the schools and among the general population are being
instituted. Norway offers an outstanding example of this.
123. At the regional level, in October 1993 in Vienna, the Heads of State and
Government of the States members of the Council of Europe adopted a plan of
action to combat racism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism and intolerance.
VI.
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
A.
Conclusions
124. The Special Rapporteur wishes to thank the Governments and non-governmental
organizations mentioned above, as well as the International Labour Organization,
also mentioned, for their active cooperation and the wealth of excellent
information supplied to him, which has been confirmed by material collected from
the press and specialized periodicals.
125. These different sources show racism and racial discrimination to be
persistent phenomena periodically manifested in the form of xenophobia,
negrophobia, anti-Semitism and anti-Arab sentiment. The result of often latent
racism, these manifestations are triggered and sustained by the rebirth or
recrudescence of extreme right-wing nationalist, neo-fascist ideologies. They
are caused by the economic crisis shaking the industrialized societies, which
are stricken by recession and unemployment, and by the crisis in European
cultural values, a model of civilization that sought to impose itself on the
contemporary world. The result is fear and distrust of the outsider - the
Other - who often comes from the South and is an easy scapegoat because he wants
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