A/HRC/36/60
number of other mandate holders calling upon the United States to immediately halt the
execution of Kevin Cooper. On 2 December, the Working Group joined several mandate
holders calling upon Governments to move from rhetoric to action and urgently honour
their political and financial commitments to development, marking the thirtieth anniversary
of the adoption of the Declaration on the Right to Development. On 5 January 2017, the
Working Group issued a statement supporting a school district which had removed an
“offensive” textbook on slavery from classrooms.
17.
A delegation of the Working Group had met with development and financial
institutions in New York from 2 to 4 November 2016, under its mandate to elaborate
proposals for the elimination of racial discrimination and to contribute to development
programmes for people of African descent.2 The delegation advocated for prioritization of
programmes and projects specifically tailored for combating racial discrimination against
people of African descent in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development and the Decade. The Working Group specifically called for the following
actions to be taken: (a) devoting special attention to the human rights situation of people of
African descent, gathering data disaggregated on the basis of race and other variables
following a human rights-based approach, analysing disparities and preparing specific
programmes of action to address gaps and improve their human rights situation; (b)
designing special projects, in collaboration with people of African descent, to support their
initiatives at the community level. The Working Group offered to assist and facilitate the
exchange of information and to connect people of African descent with financial and
development institutions for this purpose. It would share its country visit reports and
request development and financial institutions to assist Member States and people of
African descent in the implementation of its recommendations; and (c) allocating additional
investments to people of African descent in health-care systems and for education, housing,
electricity, drinking water and environmental control measures and promoting equal
opportunities in employment, as well as other affirmative or positive measures and
strategies within the human rights framework. The delegation met with the Assistant
Secretary-General for Human Rights, the United Nations Development Group Human
Rights Working Group, the United Nations Population Fund, the Department of Public
Information, the Ford Foundation, and members of civil society, the media and other
United Nations anti-racism experts. The meetings generated different avenues for further
engagement with key partners in this area.
IV. Summary of deliberations
Thematic analysis: development and people of African descent
18.
The Working Group devoted its twentieth session to the theme “Leaving no one
behind: people of African descent and the Sustainable Development Goals”.
19.
The first panel discussion focused on Sustainable Development Goal 1 on ending
poverty in all its forms everywhere. Ms. Fanon Mendes-France gave a presentation
providing examples of the types of inequalities faced by people of African descent in
different parts of the diaspora, including France and its overseas territories, specifically the
French Caribbean, which had led to poverty. She highlighted the importance of data
collection, as very little data were available for assessing the impact of poverty and
inequality on people of African descent. People of African descent had experienced poverty
since the time of the trade in enslaved Africans and it was one of the consequences of the
way in which the newly freed people had been treated after abolition. The lack of will to
repair the order which had instituted racialization kept them in a state of extreme
precariousness, the consequences of which were still visible today. They were the first to be
affected by policies that caused inequalities, including through globalization and structural
racism. She provided several socioeconomic indicators pointing to the growing inequalities
2
The Working Group also held meetings in Washington, D.C. for that purpose on 27 and 28 June
2016.
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