A/HRC/39/69
71.
Member States should, as a matter of priority and urgency, address the
overrepresentation of people of African descent in prisons and take positive measures
at all levels of the justice system to end the mass incarceration of people of African
descent. States are encouraged to explore alternatives to prosecution and
incarceration, including alternative dispute resolution processes and restorative
justice initiatives. States must engage in bail reform to ensure that people of African
descent are not more likely than others to be detained prior to their trial. States
should ensure training for sentencing judges and judges should be reminded of the
principle of proportionality in sentencing. States should take positive measures to
ensure the representation of people of African descent in the justice system, including
in law enforcement and among lawyers and the judiciary.
72.
The Working Group recommends that States end the disproportionate
criminalization of women of African descent and the violation of their rights. The best
interests of children should be paramount.
73.
States should ensure that people of African descent are afforded the necessary
language interpretation services throughout the justice system.
74.
Land rights should form the cornerstone of the promotion of and full respect
for the human rights of people of African descent. Land rights for people of African
descent must therefore be legally recognized. The enactment of ancestral rights laws
should be taken into consideration. Member States should guarantee the recognition,
titling and demarcation of land belonging to people of African descent, with the aim of
resolving outstanding land claim issues within communities of African descent.
Member States should remove the bureaucratic obstacles that prevent people of
African descent from rightfully claiming their land, including by ensuring affordable
access to legal representation.
75.
The Working Group recommends that States consider women of African
descent as a primary focus in guaranteeing land rights. Women must play a central
role in the formulation and implementation of protective policies and strategies
related to land rights, at the national, local and community levels.
76.
States should work with civil society groups to create programmes aimed at
facilitating resettlement, including aiding access to land rights for people of African
descent who are resettling in Africa.
77.
The Working Group reiterates the content of paragraph 101 of the Durban
Declaration and Programme of Action, that with a view to closing those dark chapters
in history and as a means of reconciliation and healing, the international community
and its members are invited to honour the memory of the victims of past tragedies,
including the transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans. The Working Group further
notes that some have taken the initiative of regretting or expressing remorse or
presenting apologies and calls on members that actively participated in the
transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans to pay reparations to their descendants, who
continue to suffer the consequences of the slave trade and colonialism, and to
contribute to restoring the dignity of the victims.
78.
The right to reparations for genocide and crimes against humanity, such as the
transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans, colonialism and neocolonialism is not subject
to any statute of limitations. States responsible for historical injustices must ensure
that reparations are made for those injustices to people of African descent. In addition
to financial compensation, those States should consider special measures, including
quotas in education and employment in governmental and private sectors. States must
provide reparations in a manner that fully respects and implements the right to
development of people of African descent. A tribunal dedicated to the issue of
reparatory justice should be established. The Working Group recommends the
CARICOM 10-point action plan for reparatory justice as a guiding framework.
79.
States should consider, where relevant, implementing a tax-relief scheme that
avoids double taxation for people of African descent, while simultaneously easing the
burden on successive generations of people of African descent.
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