Information Note 12: Draft resolution



[***Originally posted on the <OHCHR-NGO@LIST.UNOG.CH> list, Mod.***]

Dear Friends,

For your information, please find the attached United Nations Press Release
regarding the introduction of the draft resolutions relating to the
elimination of racism and racial discrimination that took place at the
General Assembly's Third Committee, last Friday 15 February. This Press
Release is also posted on OHCHR's web site: www.unhchr.ch

Best regards

-------------

Chers amis,

Vous trouverez ci-joint pour votre information un Bulletin de Presse des
Nations Unies sur l'introduction des projects de résolutions sur
l'élimination du racisme et la discrimination raciale qui s'est déroulé ce
vendredi 15 février au Troisième Comité de l'Assemblée Générale. Ce
Bulletin de Presse est publiée sur le site internet du HCDH: www.unhchr.ch.
Malheureusement, ces bulletins n'existent qu'en langue anglaise.

Meilleures salutations.

------------

Estimados Amigos,

Para su información encuentren adjunto el comunicado de prensa de las
Naciones Unidas sobre la introducción de los projectos de resolución sobre
la eliminación del racismo y la discriminación racial, realizado el pasado
viernes 15 de febrero en el Tercer Comité de la Asamblea General. El
comunicado de prensa se encuentra publicado en la página web de OACDH:
www.unhchr.ch. Desafortunadamente, los comunicados de prensa son publicados 
únicamente en inglés.

Reciban mis cordiales saludos

Sandra Aragón
NGO Liaison Officer
Anti-Discrimination Unit
OHCHR
Tel (41 22) 917 93 93
Fax (41 22) 917 90 50
E-mail : saragon.hchr@unog.ch



----------


UNITED NATIONS

Press Release

xxxxxxxxxx
THIRD COMMITTEE CONSIDERS DRAFT PROPOSALS ON ELIMINATION OF RACISM, RACIAL 
DISCRIMINATION
xxxxxxxxxx

Fifty-sixth General Assembly
Third Committee
60th Meeting (PM)

GA/SHC/3683
15 February 2002


The Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural) met this afternoon 
to hear the introduction of draft proposals relating to the elimination of 
racism and racial discrimination.

Before the Committee were four draft resolutions, three of them -- all 
sponsored by Venezuela -- relating respectively to the Third Decade to 
Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination; the follow-up to the World 
Conference against Racism; and measures to combat contemporary forms of 
racism and racial discrimination. The fourth text -- measures against 
political platforms based on doctrines of superiority -- is sponsored by 
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and the Russian Federation.

The Committee is expected to take action on the draft resolutions at its 
next meeting at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, 26 February.

Introduction of Draft Resolutions

Adriana Pulido (Venezuela), introduced the first three drafts on behalf of 
the "Group of 77" developing nations and China. She said the second text 
(contained in document A/C.3/56/L.84) was a new one endorsing the final 
document of last year's World Conference against Racism, held in Durban, 
South Africa. It supported the proposal by the United Nations High 
Commissioner for Human Rights for the establishment of an 
anti-discrimination Unit, and invited her Office to appoint five eminent 
experts to work with the Chairman of the Human Rights Commission and 
produce a yearly report on implementation.

Referring to the first and third drafts (documents A/C.3/56/L.83 and 
A/C.3/56/L.85), she said they contained provisions similar to others 
adopted during the fifty-fifth session, but they had been updated in view 
of Durban. The draft on the Third Decade to combat racism included 
provisions on racial discrimination against Africans and people of African 
descent, as well as financing to improve their situation.

The third draft dealt with new manifestations of racism and racial 
discrimination, she said. It stressed the need to recall the errors of the 
past with a view to condemning them; called for the criminalization of 
trafficking in people, particularly women and children, and contained 
provisions on racial profiling as well as the social and cultural rights of 
victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
Anzhela Korneliouk (Belarus), speaking on behalf of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan 
and the Russian Federation, introduced the final text (document 
A/C.3/56/L.86), saying there was still reason for concern with respect to 
the emergence and widespread growth of so-called "contemporary racism". 
That type of racism was based on intolerance and extremism, and further 
threatened international peace and security, the free development of 
States, and the assurance of equal rights among States and their citizens. 
It was appropriate, once again, to ask the General Assembly to decisively 
condemn political platforms and activities based on doctrines of superiority.

Summaries of Draft Resolutions

Part I of a draft entitled Third Decade to Combat Racism and Racial 
Discrimination and the World Conference against Racism, Racial 
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance (document 
A/C.3/56/L.83), reaffirms that racism and racial discrimination are among 
the most serious violations of human rights in the contemporary world, and 
expresses its firm determination and commitment to eradicate, by all 
available means, racism in all its forms and racial discrimination.

That draft emphasizes the importance of full compliance by States parties 
with the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial 
Discrimination. It would have the General Assembly strongly underline the 
importance of education in preventing and eradicating racism and racial 
discrimination and of creating awareness of the principles of human rights, 
in particular among young people. It would have the Assembly encourage the 
mass media to promote ideas of tolerance and understanding among peoples 
and different cultures.

Further, the Assembly would urge governments to take all necessary measures 
to combat new forms of racism, especially in the legislative, judicial, 
administrative, educational and information fields. It would call upon 
States to bring resolutely to justice the perpetrators of crimes motivated 
by racism, and call upon all those that had not done so to consider 
including racist motivation as an aggravating factor for the purpose of 
sentencing.

Part II of the draft would have the Assembly request the Commission on 
Human Rights to consider establishing a working group or other United 
Nations mechanism to study the problems of racial discrimination faced by 
people of African descent living in the African Diaspora and make proposals 
for the elimination of such problems.

The Assembly would also request States to develop and support institutional 
mechanisms to promote the accomplishment of the objectives and measures 
relating to indigenous peoples agreed in the present plan of action; and 
promote, in concert with indigenous organizations, local authorities and 
non-governmental organizations, actions aimed at overcoming racism, racial 
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance against indigenous peoples.

The text would have the Assembly encourage financial and development 
institutions as well as United Nations programmes and specialized agencies 
to assign particular priority and allocate sufficient funding to improve 
the situation of victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and 
related intolerance, and to include them in the development and 
implementation of projects concerning them.

Those institutions, programmes and agencies are encouraged to integrate 
human rights principles and standards into their policies and programmes; 
to consider including in their regular reporting information on their 
contribution to promote the participation of the victims within their 
programmes and activities; and to examine how their policies and practices 
affect the victims and ensure that those policies and practices contribute 
to the eradication of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related 
intolerance.

According to the draft resolution entitled Comprehensive implementation of 
the outcome and follow-up to the World Conference against Racism, Racial 
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance (document 
A/C.3/56/L.84), the Assembly would decide to hold a special session in 2006 
for an overall review and appraisal of the implementation of the Conference 
outcome and to consider further actions and initiatives.

Stressing the need to translate the Durban commitments into concrete 
actions, the Assembly would urge States to establish and implement without 
delay national policies and action plans to combat racism, racial 
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.

Similarly, it would call upon all States to give widespread publicity to 
the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, in order to increase, 
strengthen and enhance that fight.

Under a related provision, the Assembly would request the Secretary-General 
to appoint five independent eminent experts to follow the implementation of 
the provisions of the Declaration and Action Programme. It would also 
request the High Commissioner for Human Rights to cooperate with those five 
experts and report annually to the Assembly and the Human Rights Commission 
on implementation of the provisions of the Declaration and Action Programme.

The Assembly also would recognize the critical importance of placing the 
outcome of the Durban Conference on an equal footing with previous Untied 
Nations world conferences that have addressed essential social and human 
rights issues, such as the outcomes of the 1993 World Conference on Human 
Rights, the 1995 World Social Summit for Social Development, and the 1995 
Fourth World Conference on Women, all of which had five-year reviews.

By a draft entitled Measures to combat contemporary forms of racism and 
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance (document 
A/C.3/56/L.85), the General Assembly would reaffirm the proclamation of 
2001 as the International Year of Mobilization against Racism, Racial 
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance.

By other terms, it would reaffirm that violence against others stemming 
from racism did not constitute expressions of opinion but rather offences. 
The Assembly would further express its profound concern about and 
unequivocal condemnation of all forms of racism, racial discrimination, 
xenophobia and related intolerance, in particular all racist violence, 
including related acts of random and indiscriminate violence.

Further, the Assembly would express its profound concern about and 
unequivocal condemnation of all forms of racism and racial discrimination, 
including propaganda, activities and organizations based on doctrines of 
superiority attempting to justify or promote racism and racial 
discrimination in any form.

The Assembly would further express its profound concern about and 
condemnation of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related 
intolerance against, and stereotyping of, migrant workers and members of 
their families, persons belonging to minorities and members of vulnerable 
groups in many societies,

Also by the text, the Assembly would note with great concern that, despite 
the international community's efforts at various levels, racism, racial 
discrimination, xenophobia and related forms of intolerance, ethnic 
antagonism and violence were showing signs of increase in many parts of the 
world, and that the number of associations established on the basis of 
racial and xenophobic charters was increasing.

According to a text on Measures to be taken against political platforms and 
activities based on doctrines of superiority which are based on racial 
discrimination or ethnic exclusiveness and xenophobia, including, in 
particular, neo-Nazism (document A/C.3/56/L.86), the Assembly would urge 
States to take all available measures in accordance with their obligations 
under international human rights instruments to combat those phenomena.

The Assembly would urge all States to consider the adoption, as a matter of 
high priority, of appropriate measures to eradicate activities that lead to 
violence and condemn any dissemination of ideas based on doctrines of 
superiority, consistent with their national legal systems and in accordance 
with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenants 
on Human Rights and the International Convention on the Elimination of All 
Forms of Racial Discrimination.

Deeply alarmed at the continued intensification of activities by neo-Nazi 
groups and organizations, the Assembly would again resolutely condemn 
political platforms and activities based on doctrines of superiority, which 
are based on racial discrimination or ethnic exclusiveness and xenophobia, 
including, in particular, neo-Nazism, which entail abuse of human rights 
and fundamental freedoms.

The Assembly would also request the Secretary-General to include, in his 
report to the next Assembly session, information on the measures taken by 
Member States against political platforms and activities based on doctrines 
of superiority which are based on racial discrimination or ethnic 
exclusiveness and xenophobia, in particular neo-Nazism.





[Reply to this message] [Start a new topic] [Date Index] [Thread Index] [Author Index] [Subject Index] [List Home Page] [HREA Home Page]