The United Nations five-member Working Group of Experts onPeople of African Descent say they are "extremely concerned about the
human rights situation of African Americans."
"Despite substantial changes since the end of the
enforcement of Jim Crow and the fight for civil rights, ideology ensuring the
domination of one group over another continues to negatively impact the civil,
political, economic, social, cultural, and environmental rights of African
Americans today," said human rights expert and working group head Mireille
Fanon Mendes France. "The persistent gap in almost all the human development
indicators, such as life expectancy, income and wealth, level of education,
housing, employment and labour, and even food security, among African Americans
and the rest of the US population, reflects the level of structural
discrimination that creates de facto barriers for people of African descent to
fully exercise their human rights," Mendes France's continues.
Among the numerous problems noted in the findings is
"the alarming levels of police brutality and excessive use of lethal force
by law enforcement officials committed with impunity," citing the killings
of Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, Walter Scott, Freddie Gray, and
Laquan McDonald, as well as others.
"Contemporary police killings and the trauma it creates
are reminiscent of the racial terror lynching of the past. Impunity for state
violence has resulted in the current human rights crisis and must be addressed
as a matter of urgency," the statement reads.
The group slams "the criminalization of poverty which
disproportionately affects African Americans," and calls out cities like
Ferguson, Mo. where jails are often "debtors' prisons."
The report goes on to note discriminatory voter ID laws;
states' rejection of Medicaid expansion, which serves as just one way in which
African Americans' realization of the right to health is thwarted; the
existence of "food deserts" in many African American communities;
schools' insufficient covering of the period of enslavement and the "root
causes of racial inequality and injustice... [thereby] contribut[ing] to the
structural invisibility of African-Americans"; the housing crisis, high
rates of homelessness and gentrification; the high unemployment rate of African
Americans; and the environmental justice denied African Americans by highly
polluting industries often disproportionately being placed in their
communities.
The group reiterates their calls from 2010 after their last
visit to the country, including the need to establish a national human rights
commission, for Congress to swiftly pass pending criminal justice reform bills
including the End Racial Profiling Act, and the need for a national ban on the
death penalty. It also states:
“There is a profound need to acknowledge that the
transatlantic slave trade was a crime against humanity and among the major
sources and manifestations of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance and that Africans and people of African descent were
victims of these acts and continue to be victims of their consequences. Past
injustices and crimes against African Americans need to be addressed with
reparatory justice.”
As the American author William Faulkner wrote, "The past is not dead. It
isn't even past".
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