A/52/471
English
Page 15
35. The elements of this initiative are: the establishment of a diverse,
seven-member advisory board which will examine the current state of racial
discrimination and recommend appropriate corrective measures to the President; a
nationwide campaign by the President to raise public awareness; outreach to
community leaders, businessmen, State and local officials, members of Congress,
business leaders and individuals, encouraging them to become involved in
reconciliation and community-building projects; and a President's report to the
nation on the status of the race issue.
36.
The President's report, to be issued at the end of September 1998, will:
"Present his vision of One America, including an illustration and
assessment of the growing diversity of our nation, and of his consultations
with his advisory board;
Reflect the work that has occurred during the year, including the
conversations and suggestions made at town hall meetings and other venues;
Report on how the nation has evolved on the issue of race over the
past 30 years, including the studies commissioned for the initiative;
Provide recommendations and solutions that enable individuals,
communities, businesses, organizations and government to address difficult
issues and build on our best possibilities."
37. The Special Rapporteur welcomes this initiative by the United States
Government.
C.
France
38. In his previous report to the General Assembly (A/51/301), the Special
Rapporteur had noted the intention of the then French legislature to increase
the severity of the Pasqua/Debré laws governing foreign residents by adopting
measures to improve control over immigration by non-Europeans. The measures
envisaged included making the issuance of short-stay visas more systematically
subject to proof of health insurance (a formality which would be required in the
case of countries where the "migratory risk" was high); improving the
identification of visa applicants from those countries; reforming the procedure
for the issuance of the "certificat d'hébergement" (inter alia by requiring the
person offering accommodation to give notice of the visitor's departure);
restricting hospital care for illegal aliens to "emergencies" or to diseases
likely to be contagious; and extending to 40 days the period of administrative
detention for persons who entered France illegally.
39. The Special Rapporteur had criticized the discriminatory nature of the
proposed measures. He has since been informed of the measures recently
envisaged by the new French Government.6 These include regularizing the status
of certain categories of undocumented aliens7 and drafting a preliminary bill on
the entry and stay of foreign nationals. The preliminary bill includes
provisions designed to make it easier for foreigners to stay in France and for
foreign scientists, students and persons "with strong ties to France" (older
/...