A/50/476
English
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racial discrimination, and that historical, sociological, psychological and
structural inertia were behind the subtle forms of racism and racial
discrimination that lingered in American society. While welcoming the recent
ratification of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination, the Special Rapporteur recommended that the United States
Government should revitalize affirmative action programmes in order to remove
economic and social disparities, and should take measures to prohibit the
establishment of racist organizations and ban racist propaganda. He hoped that
the United States would ratify all the international human rights conventions,
which would strengthen its foreign policy in the pursuit of peace and raise its
credibility.
19. The United States Government made some observations in plenary meeting and
in a letter to the Special Rapporteur. 10/ In the statement to the Commission
on Human Rights, the representative of the United States of America emphasized
that no country had gone as far as the United States in implementing so
comprehensive an array of legal measures against racial and ethnic
discrimination in voting rights, housing, employment and access to public
services. Several lessons learned in the United States in the fight against
discrimination could be useful to the international community. The United
States welcomed the decision the previous year to extend the definition of
racial discrimination to include anti-Semitism and anti-Arab behaviour. It
noted, however, the persistence of prejudice and xenophobia in several parts of
the world. The United States representative welcomed the content of the report
and the opportunity to discuss the recommendations in the context of national
efforts aimed at the complete elimination of racism. The United States
delegation noted, however, that some of the recommendations presented real
problems with regard to freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom of
the press.
20. The following excerpts from the United States Government’s letter add
specifics to the statement made by its representative to the fifty-first session
of the Commission on Human Rights:
"As your report suggests, the United States has repeatedly and
consistently condemned racial discrimination. We have undertaken to pursue
by all appropriate means a policy of extirpating such discrimination in all
its forms.
"We have promoted racial understanding, and sought to guarantee to
everyone, without distinction as to race, colour, national or ethnic
origin, the right to equality before the law in civil, political and
economic rights. Thus, contemporary United States domestic law on federal,
state and local levels provides strong protections against racial
discrimination in all fields of public endeavour and in many areas of
private life. Our laws also include effective means of redress and
recourse for those who, despite these protections, nevertheless become
victims of discriminatory acts. We have also recently become a party to
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination.
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