E/CN.4/2004/18/Add.2
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living in English-speaking provinces, who are considered to be genuine French speakers, owing
to the exclusive mother tongue definition. For example, francophones in Ontario of European
descent (500,000) receive about CAD 300 million each year through their institutions and
organizations just from the official language support programme set up and run for this purpose
by the Department of Canadian Heritage, whereas the 300,000 francophones of non-European
descent receive only CAD 150,000 a year, through their organizations, merely because they are
not considered to be “proper” francophones.16 According to all the other persons interviewed by
the Special Rapporteur, this means that race and ethnic origin are indirectly used as determining
factors in the definition of who is French-speaking. Thus persons of non-French ethnic groups,
such as the Creole, Swahili, Wolof, Arab, Fon, Goun, Bambara, Vietnamese, Lingala, Kirundi,
Ewe or Mina, are not recognized as francophones in Canada even though French is their official
language in accordance with the Official Languages Act. The communities concerned consider
that they are economically, socially and culturally disadvantaged by the regulations that enforce
the Act.
67.
One group of the black francophone community has responded to the situation by lodging
a complaint against the Canadian Government before the courts for discrimination in the
implementation of the Official Languages Act and the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms. The complaint requests that the Government, in conformity with the Official
Languages Act, should grant French-speaking status to any person who speaks French,
regardless of that person’s ethnic origin or first language spoken and still understood, and that
the existing regulations should be repealed on the grounds that they contradict the spirit and
letter of the Act under which they are issued.
III. ANALYSIS AND ASSESSMENT OF POLITICAL, LEGAL
AND INTELLECTUAL STRATEGY
68.
The Special Rapporteur considers that owing to its background and its specific
characteristics, Canadian society is still affected by racism and racial discrimination. Because of
its history, Canadian society, as in all the countries of North and South America, carries a heavy
legacy of racial discrimination, which was the ideological prop of trans-Atlantic slavery and of
the colonial system. The ideological aspect of this legacy has given rise to an intellectual
mindset which, through education, literature, art and the different channels of thought and
creativity, has profoundly and lastingly permeated the system of values, feelings, mentalities,
perceptions and behaviours, and hence the country’s culture. The sacrificial victims of this
culture of discrimination since historical times have been the aboriginal peoples and the
communities of African and Caribbean origin.
69.
It is this legacy which has been feeding the submerged part of the iceberg of
discrimination. The issue is dominated by two major geographical and ideological factors. The
geographical factor arises from Canada’s proximity to a country, the United States, which has
been profoundly and lastingly affected by racial discrimination. The ideological factor is partly
an intellectual consequence of this geographical proximity, but is also derived from the general
atmosphere of discrimination generated by the excesses of the fight against terrorism, following
the tragedy of 11 September 2001. It is in the political and cultural field, thanks to Canada’s
current focus on multiculturalism, that the Special Rapporteur has been able to observe some
alleviation of the burden of the legacy of racial discrimination. Nevertheless, the fact that two
communities, which were historically the victims of discrimination, both individually and