A/HRC/39/69
54.
Institutional and structural racism and racial discrimination are the legacies of
enslavement, colonialism, neocolonialism and centuries of dehumanization. People of
African descent are disproportionately discriminated against in the administration of
justice. Racial profiling gives rise to police brutality and other violations, particularly
against people of African descent. Trends ranging from stop and search to the killing
of people of African descent by law enforcement agents are of grave concern to the
Working Group.
55.
The overrepresentation of people of African descent in prisons is a major
concern for the Working Group. People of African descent are less likely to be
granted bail than others, thereby spending more time in jail before they are even
convicted of a crime. They are more likely to receive harsher sentences for the same
crimes than others. Once incarcerated, people of African descent are more likely to be
segregated and subjected to violence at the hands of prison staff, and are more likely
to die while in custody. People of African descent are also underrepresented in
employment in the justice system.
56.
The Working Group is concerned by the growing trend of criminalization and
sexual exploitation of women of African descent. That also leads to infringement of the
rights of children, some of whom are born and remain in prisons or detention centres
for prolonged periods of time.
57.
In the criminal justice system, language barriers can be compounded by social
or cultural pressure to speak a language that migrants, refugees and asylum seekers of
African descent do not understand. Some may not be aware of the right to use their
language or have access to interpretation where it is available. Such barriers can lead
to miscommunication and grave injustices.
58.
For people of African descent, land is a strategic resource. Among other things,
it is a source of livelihood and economic activity for them and informs their identity,
culture, spirituality and self-worth. Historically, people of African descent have been
subjected to violent dispossession of their lands and continue to struggle to maintain
collective control of them. In urban settings, people of African descent confront
documented, egregious racial discrimination related to security of tenure, including in
their access to housing.
59.
Women are especially vulnerable to multiple and intersecting forms of
discrimination, which heightens their exclusion from land rights. Patriarchal cultural
practices, in combination with legal frameworks, exclude women from realizing their
land rights. That is despite the pivotal role that women play in productive land use
and supporting families and communities, often doing so in the absence of
compensation for and recognition of their fundamental roles.
60.
A growing number of people of African descent aspire to return to their
ancestral lands in Africa. Those who return to Africa require support to facilitate
access to landownership.
61.
People of African descent have a right to reparations, which should be
proportional to the gravity of the violations and the harm suffered. The consequences
of the trade in enslaved Africans, enslavement, colonialism, neocolonialism and
discrimination go beyond mere financial inequalities. They include injustices, such as
intergenerational health issues, disproportionately high illiteracy rates and the
erasure of collective culture, history and identity. Reparations include the right to
restitution, rehabilitation, compensation, and safeguarding and protection from
future violations.
62.
The Working Group is concerned by the risk of people of African descent
making contributions to State funds, including through taxation, that could be used to
pay reparations to descendants of enslaved Africans.
63.
The principle aspect of the draft declaration should be made clear: that people
of African descent are particularly vulnerable to structural discrimination and
various forms of inequity with respect to the enjoyment of human rights. Equality and
non-discrimination are foundational principles of human rights.
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