A/HRC/49/46/Add.1
61.
As federal laws supersede local laws of Guam and other territories, the local
population often feels its rights and interests are subsidiary to those of citizens from the
mainland. Citizens of Guam cannot vote in presidential elections and have no voting
representation in the United States Congress. A plebiscite to let the people who were
colonized by the United States and their descendants decide on their status and the future of
the island was blocked by a lower court and affirmed in a ruling of the United States Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in 2019. The Ninth Circuit found the plebiscite statute used
ancestry as a proxy for race, in violation of the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution. Many
local residents feel they are second-class citizens who cannot effectively present and protect
their interests.
62.
The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is similarly devoid of equal rights to political
participation and representation. Puerto Rico has a fiscal deficit that compounds its political
rights deficit. Because of the territory’s precarious budgetary position, real legal and political
authority ultimately resides in the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto
Rico, which was imposed by Congress as part of the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management
and Economic Stability Act of 2016. The draconian austerity measures imposed on Puerto
Rican territorial authorities and the whole population, without regard to any obvious human
rights considerations in the decisions made by the Board, have led to dramatic cuts and
reductions in areas such as public education and public health. It is difficult to disagree with
the claims made by many Puerto Ricans during meetings in San Juan and Vieques, that Puerto
Rico is being controlled by a colonial-type overseas power to the detriment of its people,
without any meaningful representation at the national level and with no real ability to govern
itself as a Non-Self-Governing Territory in the international sense.
63.
While the current administration must be commended for adopting executive orders
that seek to address some of these grievances, none fundamentally change many of the claims
of discriminatory treatment. An anachronistic legal and political legacy from an era with a
colonial mindset towards mainly non-white minorities remains in place. The Special
Rapporteur is of the view that a new federal approach is necessary in order to fully respect
the identity, traditions and specificities of the populations of the territories and their minority
communities, including their rights as Non-Self-Governing Territories and their human rights
as recognized under international human rights instruments.
X. Environmental injustice and discriminatory treatment of
minorities
64.
Minorities are often disproportionally exposed to serious environmental hazards and
contamination, including contamination of their sources of drinking water. The
disproportionate impact of such hazards on society, including on health, standards of living
and educational performance, were highlighted during powerful testimonies in Guam and
Vieques, Puerto Rico. Other special procedures, including the Working Group of Experts on
People of African Descent, have also been presented with compelling evidence of minorities
“in disadvantaged areas with hazardous environments (for example, in proximity to industrial
toxicity, power stations, flood zones and so on) and without access to social and commercial
facilities. The most polluting industrial facilities, across a range of sectors from farming and
mining to manufacturing, are more likely to be situated in poor and minority neighbourhoods,
including those of people of African descent … and the lead-contaminated water in Flint,
Michigan”.23 Minority communities and the peoples in territories such as Guam and Puerto
Rico, as well as poorer minority rural regions on the mainland, may find themselves
disproportionally exposed to contamination by chemicals or other pollutants, underserved by
municipal sewage systems or used over years as dumping grounds for military toxic
ammunition and poisons. Despite the grave health consequences, highly contaminated sites
known as Superfund sites such as in Vieques, Puerto Rico, and in Guam, or the municipal
water supply in Flint, Michigan, where minorities are concentrated, do not seem to be as
sufficiently prioritized for clean-up as they should be, in an efficient or expedited manner.
23
A/HRC/33/61/Add.2, para, 52.
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