A/HRC/24/52
and which had denied them the basic notions of natural rights (the right to life, liberty and
property). He introduced the University College of London’s Legacies of British Slaveownership database and the recently created Voyages database to highlight the character of
the trade and by extension to facilitate a much broader understanding of the experiences of
enslaved Africans. He also presented statistical data on the magnitude of the transatlantic
slave trade, the mortality rates of the enslaved and the atrocities committed against the
enslaved by their enslavers, as well as the resistance against such enslavement.
14.
During the interactive discussion, Ms. Najcevska thanked the presenter and
suggested that the study of the contents of the database should be included in all school
curricula to raise awareness and visibility about the research conducted. Similarly, Ms.
Fanon Mendes-France enquired about the linkages between different databases. She further
enquired whether the developers of the database were in contact with the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Slave Route Project, which
Mr. Reid confirmed was the case. Following the presentation, Ms. Fanon Mendes-France
also recommended the creation of an international financial fund for historians and
researchers on the topic.
15.
Susana Baca, the former Minister of Culture of Peru and a singer and two-time
Grammy-award winner, delivered a presentation on the promotion of cultural rights of
people of African descent. She described the situation of people of African descent in her
country, stating that, despite rich cultural diversity, racism and discrimination were still
prevalent. She established the relationship between access to education, self-consciousness
of peoples’ own dignity and their ability to gain political capacity to negotiate. She stated
that the poor remained deprived of their rights and emphasized that development indicators
needed to be disaggregated by geographical areas, economic levels and ethnic origin, so as
to identify and protect the rights of excluded and marginalized groups. Owing to the
prevalence of historical discrimination leading to feelings of inferiority among people of
African descent, self-esteem through the enjoyment of cultural rights was crucial. Ms. Baca
pointed out that it was only in 2012 that Peru had for the first time introduced into its
education curriculum the study on the transatlantic slave trade.
16.
Ms. Shepherd presented a paper on “Monuments, Memorialization and Black
Identity”. She pointed out that tangible sites of memory were not only erected to honour
heroes, but were regarded as part of a people’s cultural expression and an essential
reflection of people’s cultural rights. They represented the other side of intangible heritage.
She also stated that, despite the ubiquitousness of monuments and declared sites of
memory, there was no consensus surrounding their purpose, audience or constituency; nor
could anyone predict the public response to them. She gave examples from the Caribbean
experience showing that Caribbean people had sought to eradicate and dismantle political
structures of imperialism and historical representations of the Caribbean in text and image
that mostly reflected British colonial subjectivity and authority. In the process, they had
sought to reclaim and reconstruct the indigenous, African, Creole and immigrant
experiences.
17.
According to Ms. Shepherd, the erection of monuments to the leaders of the antislavery struggle and black liberation movements had been an essential post-colonial
activity. Indeed, all over the African diaspora, the descendants of black freedom fighters
had devised creative ways of re-voicing collectively the black experience and finding
appropriate ways to honour the memory of the African freedom fighters. Ms. Shepherd
stated in her presentation that a continued focus on leaders among the icons memorialized
had led to increasing criticism of the project of iconographic and symbolic decolonization
and a call for its completion through the construction of sites of memory to the masses, so
that the sites of memory could voice the black experience more collectively and include
women icons, among others.
5