E/CN.4/1997/71
page 26
88.
It was further stated that, despite
programmes, “the State Department remains
mid-1993, papers filed with the case show
6.7 per cent Black. Only 1.4 per cent of
service were Black”.
years of affirmative action
a very white institution. As of
87.6 per cent were White and
the diplomats in the senior foreign
89.
The Special Rapporteur has received no reply from the Government of the
United States of America.
2.
Communication dated 28 May 1996
90.
The Special Rapporteur transmitted allegations of poor police conduct
in coloured communities. A national tribunal, meeting in Chicago on
26 October 1995 to give a hearing to victims of police misconduct, made a
statement from which the following extracts are taken.
“After reviewing the testimony and documentation we are convinced
that the evidence supports a conclusion that police violence and
corruption on the local, state and federal levels, particularly within
communities of colour and poor communities, are at the foundation of a
gross and consistent pattern of human rights violations in the
United States.
“As judges with expertise in human rights violations, we are
familiar with documented reports of police violence and corruption
dating back at least to the creation of the United States. The evidence
that we have reviewed suggests that the police violence chronicled
throughout history has not abated. Indeed, in the words of one witness,
'it is unremitting'.
“Our concern is heightened by the testimony of some of the
witnesses perpetuating the view that police misconduct should be
punished because the victim was 'innocent', that is, not engaged in any
criminal conduct. Yet the police abuses reported far exceeded any
actions that could be justified based on criminal conduct of any of the
victims. The documentation of criminalization of youth of colour,
particularly Black and Latino, reviewed prior to the Tribunal and during
it, support the conclusion that police are often able to avoid
discipline and punishment because their victims are young, poor and of
colour.
“In addition to the criminalization of youth of colour and the
poor, the testimony raised a number of significant issues, including the
following:
1.
Police across the United States have engaged in beatings,
harassment, physical torture and murder of individuals.
2.
Police across the United States have been involved in
frame-ups, calculated efforts to discredit witnesses and complaints, and
the destruction of key evidence.