UNITED NATIONS |
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A |
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General
Assembly |
Distr. GENERAL A/CONF.189/…… 24
September 2001 Original: ENGLISH |
WORLD
CONFERENCE AGAINST RACISM,
RACIAL
DISCRIMINATION, XENOPHOBIA
AND
RELATED INTOLERANCE
Agenda
item 9
(UNEDITED VERSION)
DECLARATION
Having met
in Durban, South Africa, from 31 August to 8 September 2001;
Expressing
deep appreciation to the Government of South Africa for hosting this World
Conference;
Drawing
inspiration from the heroic struggle of the people of South Africa against
the institutionalized system of apartheid, as well as for equality and justice
under democracy, development, the rule of law and respect for human rights,
recalling in this context the important contribution to that struggle of the
international community and, in particular, the pivotal role of the people and
Governments of Africa, and noting the important role that different actors of
civil society, including non-governmental organizations, played in that
struggle and in ongoing efforts to combat racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
Recalling
that the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, adopted by the World
Conference on Human Rights in June 1993, calls for the speedy and comprehensive
elimination of all forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance;
Recalling
Commission on Human Rights resolution 1997/74, General Assembly
resolution 52/111 and subsequent resolutions of those bodies concerning
the convening of the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination,
Xenophobia and Related Intolerance and recalling also the two World Conferences
to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination, held in Geneva in 1978 and 1983
respectively;
Noting
with grave concern that despite the efforts of the international community, the
principal objectives of the three decades to combat racism and racial
discrimination have not been attained and that countless human beings continue
to the present day to be the victims of various forms of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
Recalling
that the year 2001 is the International Year of Mobilization against Racism,
Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, aimed at drawing the
world’s attention to the objectives of the World Conference and giving
new momentum to the political commitment to eliminate all forms of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
Welcoming
the decision of the General Assembly to proclaim the year 2001 as the United
Nations Year of Dialogue among Civilizations, which underlines tolerance and
respect for diversity and the need to seek common ground among and within
civilizations in order to address common challenges to humanity that threaten
shared values, universal human rights and the fight against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, through cooperation,
partnership and inclusion;
Welcoming
also the proclamation by the General Assembly of the period 2001-2010 as
the Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for Children of the World,
as well as the adoption by the General Assembly of the Declaration and Plan of
Action on a Culture of Peace;
Recognizing
that the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and
Related Intolerance, in conjunction with the International Decade of the
World’s Indigenous People, presents a unique opportunity to consider the
invaluable contributions of indigenous peoples to political, economic, social,
cultural and spiritual development throughout the world to our societies, as
well as the challenges faced by them, including racism and racial
discrimination;
Recalling
the United Nations Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial
Countries and Peoples of 1960;
Reaffirming
our commitment to the purposes and principles contained in the Charter of the
United Nations and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
Affirming
that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance
constitute a negation of the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United
Nations;
Reaffirming
the principles of equality and non-discrimination in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and encouraging respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms for all without distinction of any kind such as race, colour, sex, language,
religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property,
birth or other status;
Convinced of the
fundamental importance of universal accession to or ratification of and full
implementation of our obligations arising under the International Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination as the principal
international instrument to eliminate racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance;
Recognizing
the fundamental importance for States, in combating racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance, to consider signing,
ratifying or acceding to all relevant international human rights instruments,
with a view to universal adherence;
Having
taken note of the reports of the regional conferences organized at
Strasbourg, Santiago, Dakar and Tehran and other inputs from States, as well as
the reports of expert seminars, non-governmental organization regional meetings
and other meetings organized in preparation for the World Conference;
Noting
with appreciation the Vision Statement launched by President
Thabo Mbeki of South Africa under the patronage of The Honourable
Nelson Mandela, first President of the new South Africa, and at the
initiative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and
Secretary‑General of the World Conference, and signed by seventy-four
heads of State, heads of Government and dignitaries;
Reaffirming
that cultural diversity is a cherished asset for the advancement and welfare of
humanity at large and should be valued, enjoyed, genuinely accepted and
embraced as a permanent feature which enriches our societies;
Acknowledging
that no derogation from the prohibition of racial discrimination, genocide, the
crime of apartheid and slavery is permitted, as defined in the obligations
under the relevant human rights instruments;
Having
listened to the peoples of the world and recognizing their aspirations to
justice, to equality of opportunity for all and everyone, to the enjoyment of
their human rights, including the right to development, to live in peace and
freedom and to equal participation without discrimination in economic, social,
cultural, civil and political life;
Recognizing
that equal participation of all individuals and peoples in the formation of
just, equitable, democratic and inclusive societies can contribute to a world
free from racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
Emphasizing
the importance of the equitable participation of all, without any discrimination,
in domestic as well as global decision-making;
Affirming that
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, where they
amount to racism and racial discrimination, constitute serious violations of
and obstacles to the full enjoyment of all human rights and deny the self-
evident truth that all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and
rights, are an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations among peoples and
nations, and are among the root causes of many internal and international
conflicts, including armed conflicts, and the consequent forced displacement of
populations
Recognizing
that national and international actions are required to combat racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in order to ensure the full
enjoyment of all human rights, economic, social, cultural, civil and political,
which are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated, and to
improve the living conditions of men, women and children of all nations;
Reaffirming
the importance of the enhancement of international cooperation for the
promotion and protection of human rights and for the achievement of the
objectives of the fight against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance;
Acknowledging
that xenophobia, in its different manifestations, is one of the main
contemporary sources and forms of discrimination and conflict, combating which
requires urgent attention and prompt action by States, as well as by the
international community;
Fully
aware that, despite efforts undertaken by the international community,
Governments and local authorities, the scourge of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance persists and continues
to result in violations of human rights, suffering, disadvantage and violence,
which must be combated by all available and appropriate means and as a
matter of the highest priority, preferably in cooperation with affected
communities;
Noting
with concern the continued and violent occurrence of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and that theories of
superiority of certain races and cultures over others, promoted and practised
during the colonial era, continue to be propounded in one form or another even
today;
Alarmed
by the emergence and continued occurrence of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance in their more subtle and contemporary forms
and manifestations, as well as by other ideologies and practices based on
racial or ethnic discrimination or superiority;
Strongly
rejecting any doctrine of racial superiority, along with theories which
attempt to determine the existence of so-called distinct human races;
Recognizing
that failure to combat and denounce racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance by all, especially by public authorities and
politicians at all levels is a factor encouraging their perpetuation;
Reaffirming
that States have the duty to protect and promote the human rights and
fundamental freedoms of all victims, and that they should apply a gender(1)
perspective, recognizing the multiple forms of discrimination which women can
face, and that the enjoyment of their civil, political, economic, social and
cultural rights is essential for the development of societies throughout the
world;
Recognizing
both the challenges and opportunities presented by an increasingly globalized
world in relation to the struggle to eradicate racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
Determined,
in an era when globalization and technology have contributed considerably to
bringing people together to materialize the notion of a human family based on
equality, dignity and solidarity, and to make the twenty-first century a
century of human rights, the eradication of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance and the realization of genuine equality of
opportunity and treatment for all individuals and peoples;
Reaffirming
the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples and recalling
that all individuals are born equal in dignity and rights, stressing that such
equality must be protected as a matter of the highest priority and recognizing
the duty of States to take prompt, decisive and appropriate measures with a
view to eliminating all forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance;
Dedicating
ourselves to combating the scourge of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance fully and effectively as a matter of
priority, while drawing lessons from manifestations and past experiences of
racism in all parts of the world with a view to avoiding their recurrence;
Joining
together in a spirit of renewed political will and commitment to universal
equality, justice and dignity, we salute the memory of all victims of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance all over the world
and solemnly adopt the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action (2);
1. We declare that for the purpose of the present
Declaration and Programme of
Action, the victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance are individuals or groups of individuals who are or have been
negatively affected by, subjected to, or targets of these scourges;
2. We
recognize that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance occur on the grounds of race, colour, descent or national or ethnic
origin and victims can suffer multiple or aggravated forms of discrimination
based on other related grounds such as sex, language, religion, political or
other opinion, social origin, property, birth or other status;
3. We
recognize and affirm that, at the outset of the third millennium, a global
fight against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, and all their abhorrent and evolving forms and manifestations is a
matter of priority for the international community, and that this Conference
offers a unique and historic opportunity for assessing and identifying all
dimensions of those devastating evils of humanity with a view to their total
elimination through, inter alia, the initiation of innovative and
holistic approaches and the strengthening and enhancement of practical and
effective measures at the national, regional and international levels;
4. We
express our solidarity with the peoples of Africa in their continuing struggle
against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and
recognize the sacrifices made by them, as well as their efforts in raising
international public awareness of these inhuman tragedies;
5. We
also affirm the great importance we attach to the values of solidarity,
respect, tolerance and multiculturalism, which constitute the moral ground and
inspiration for our world wide struggle against racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance, inhuman tragedies which have affected
people throughout the world, especially in Africa, for too long;
6. We
further affirm that all peoples and individuals constitute one human family,
rich in diversity. They have
contributed to the progress of civilizations and cultures that form the common
heritage of humanity. Preservation
and promotion of tolerance, pluralism and respect for diversity can produce
more inclusive societies;
7. We
declare that all human beings are born free, equal in dignity and rights and
have the potential to contribute constructively to the development and
well-being of their societies. Any
doctrine of racial superiority is scientifically false, morally condemnable,
socially unjust and dangerous, and must be rejected along with theories which
attempt to determine the existence of separate human races;
8. We
recognize that religion, spirituality and belief play a central role in the
lives of millions of women and men, and in the way they live and treat other
persons. Religion, spirituality
and belief may and can contribute to the promotion of the inherent dignity and
worth of the human person and to the eradication of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
9. We note with concern that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance may be aggravated by, inter alia, inequitable distribution of wealth, marginalization and social exclusion;
10. We reaffirm
that everyone is entitled to a social and international order in which all
human rights can be fully realized for all, without any discrimination;
11. We note
that the process of globalization constitutes a powerful and dynamic force
which should be harnessed/utilized for the benefit, development and prosperity
of all countries, without exclusion.
We recognize that developing countries face special difficulties in
responding to this central challenge.
While globalization offers great opportunities, at present its benefits
are very unevenly shared, while its costs are unevenly distributed. We thus express our determination to
prevent and mitigate the negative effects of globalization. These effects could aggravate, inter alia,
poverty, underdevelopment, marginalization, social exclusion, cultural
homogenization and economic disparities which may occur along racial lines,
within and between States, and have an adverse impact. We further express our
determination to maximize the benefits of globalization through, inter alia,
the strengthening and enhancement of international cooperation to increase
equality of opportunities for trade, economic growth and sustainable
development, global communications through the use of new technologies and increased
intercultural exchange through the preservation and promotion of cultural
diversity, which can contribute to the eradication of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. Only through broad and sustained efforts to create a shared
future based upon our common humanity and all its diversity, can globalization
be made fully inclusive and equitable;
12. We
recognize that interregional and intraregional migration has increased as a
result of globalization, in particular from the South to the North, and
stress that policies towards migration should not be based on racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
13. We
acknowledge that slavery and the slave trade, including the transatlantic slave
trade, were appalling tragedies in the history of humanity not only because of
their abhorrent barbarism but also in terms of their magnitude, organised
nature and especially their negation of the essence of the victims and further
acknowledge that slavery and the slave trade are crimes against humanity and
should always have been so, especially the transatlantic slave trade and are
among the major sources and manifestations of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance, and that Africans and peoples of African
descent, Asians and peoples of Asian descent and indigenous peoples were
victims of these acts and continue to be victims of their consequences.
14. We
recognize that colonialism has led to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance, and that Africans and peoples of African descent, and
peoples of Asian descent and indigenous peoples were victims of colonialism and
continue to be victims of its consequences. We acknowledge the suffering caused
by colonialism and affirm that, wherever and whenever it occurred, it must be
condemned and its reoccurrence prevented. We further regret that the effects
and persistence of these structures and practices have been among the factors
contributing to lasting social and economic inequalities in many parts of the
world today;
15. We
recognize that apartheid and genocide in terms of international law constitute
crimes against humanity and are major sources and manifestations of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and acknowledge the
untold evil and suffering caused by these acts and affirms that wherever and
whenever they occurred, they must be condemned and their recurrence be
prevented;
16. We
recognize that xenophobia against non-nationals, particularly migrants,
refugees and asylum-seekers, constitutes one of the main sources of
contemporary racism and that human rights violations against members of such
groups occur widely in the context of discriminatory, xenophobic and racist
practices;
17. We note the
importance of paying special attention to new manifestations of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance to which youth and other
vulnerable groups might be exposed;
18. We emphasize
that poverty, underdevelopment, marginalization, social exclusion and economic
disparities are closely associated with racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance, and contribute to the persistence of racist
attitudes and practices which in turn generate more poverty;
19. We
recognize the negative economic, social and cultural consequences of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, which have
contributed significantly to the underdevelopment of developing countries and,
in particular, of Africa and resolve to free every man, woman and child from
the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty to which more than one
billion of them are currently subjected, to make the right to development a
reality for everyone and to free the entire human race from want;
20. We
recognize that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance are among the root causes of armed conflict and very often one
of its consequences and recall that non-discrimination is a fundamental
principle of international humanitarian law. We underscore the need for all parties to armed conflicts
to abide scrupulously by this principle and for States and the international
community to remain especially vigilant during periods of armed conflict
and continue to combat all forms of racial discrimination;
21. We express
our deep concern that socio-economic development is being hampered by widespread
internal conflicts which are due, among other causes, to gross violations of
human rights, including those arising from racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance, and from lack of democratic, inclusive and
participatory governance;
22. We express
our concern that in some States political and legal structures or institutions,
some of which were inherited and persist today, do not correspond to the multi‑ethnic,
pluricultural and plurilingual characteristics of the population and, in many
cases, constitute an important factor of discrimination in the exclusion of
indigenous peoples;
23. We fully
recognize the rights of indigenous peoples consistent with the principles of
sovereignty and territorial integrity of States, and therefore stress the need
to adopt the appropriate constitutional, administrative, legislative and
judicial measures, including those derived from applicable international
instruments;
24. We
declare that, the use of the term “indigenous peoples” in the Declaration
and Programme of Action of the World Conference against Racism, Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance is in the context of, and
without prejudice to the outcome of, ongoing international negotiations on
texts that specifically deal with this issue, and cannot be construed as having
any implications as to rights under international law;
25. We
express our profound repudiation of the racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance that persists in some States in the
functioning of the penal systems and in the application of the law, as well as
in the actions and attitudes of institutions and individuals responsible for
law enforcement, especially where this has contributed to certain groups being
over-represented among persons under detention or imprisoned;
26. We affirm
the need to put an end to impunity for violations of the human rights and
fundamental freedoms of individuals and groups who are victimized by racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
27. We express
our concern that, beyond the fact that racism is gaining ground, contemporary
forms and manifestations of racism and xenophobia are striving to regain
political, moral and even legal recognition in many ways, including through the
platforms of some political parties and organizations and the dissemination
through modern communication technologies of ideas based on the notion of
racial superiority;
28. We recall
that persecution against any identifiable group, collectivity or community on
racial, national, ethnic or other grounds that are universally recognized as
impermissible under international law, as well as the crime of apartheid
constitute serious violations of human rights and, in some cases, qualify as
crimes against humanity;
29. We strongly
condemn the fact that slavery and slavery-like practices still exist today in
parts of the world and urge States to take immediate measures as a matter of
priority to end such practices, which constitute flagrant violations of human
rights;
30. We affirm
the urgent need to prevent, combat and eliminate all forms of trafficking in
persons, in particular women and children, and recognize that victims of
trafficking are particularly exposed to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance;
31. We
recognize the value and diversity of the cultural heritage of Africans and
people of African descent and affirm the importance and necessity of ensuring
their full integration into social, economic and political life with a view to
facilitating their full participation at all levels in the decision-making
process;
32. We
considers it essential for all countries in the region of the Americas and all
other areas of the African diaspora to recognize the existence of their
population of African descent and the cultural, economic, political and
scientific contributions made by that population, and recognize the persistence
of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance that
specifically affect them, and recognize that, in many countries, their
long-standing inequality in terms of access to, inter alia, education,
health care and housing has been a profound cause of the socio-economic
disparities that affect them;
33. We
recognize that people of African descent have for centuries been victims of
racism, racial discrimination and enslavement and of the denial by history of
many of their rights, and assert that they should be treated with fairness and
respect for their dignity and should not suffer discrimination of any
kind. Recognition should therefore
be given to their rights to culture and their own identity; to participate freely
and on equal conditions in political, social, economic and cultural life; to
development in the context of their own aspirations and customs; to keep,
maintain and foster their own forms of organization, their mode of life,
culture, traditions and religious expressions; to maintain and use their own
languages; to the protection of their traditional knowledge and their cultural
and artistic heritage; to the use, enjoyment and conservation of the natural
renewable resources of their habitat and to active participation in the design,
implementation and development of educational systems and programmes, including
those of a specific and characteristic nature; and where applicable to their
ancestrally inhabited land;
34. We
recognize that in many parts of the world, Africans and people of African descent
face barriers as a result of social biases and discrimination prevailing in
public and private institutions and express our commitment to work towards the
eradication of all forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance faced by Africans and people of African descent;
35. We
recognize that in many parts of the world, Asians and people of Asian descent
face barriers as a result of social biases and discrimination prevailing in
public and private institutions and express our commitment to work towards the
eradication of all forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance faced by Asians and people of Asian descent;
36. We notes
with appreciation that despite the racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance faced by them for centuries, people of Asian descent
have contributed and continue to contribute significantly to the economic,
social, political, scientific and cultural life of the countries where they
live;
37. We call upon
all States to review and, where necessary, revise any immigration policies
which are inconsistent with international human rights instruments, with a view
to eliminating all discriminatory policies and practices against migrants,
including Asians and people of Asian descent;
38. We
recognize that the indigenous peoples have been victims of discrimination for
centuries and affirm that they are free and equal in dignity and rights and
should not suffer any discrimination, particularly on the basis of their
indigenous origin and identity, and we stress the continuing need for action to
overcome the persistent racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance that affect them;
39. We
recognize the value and diversity of the cultures and the heritage of
indigenous peoples, whose singular contribution to the development and cultural
pluralism of society and full participation in all aspects of society, in
particular on issues that are of concern to them, are fundamental for political
and social stability, and for the development of the States in which they live;
40. We
reiterate our conviction that the full realization by indigenous peoples of
their human rights and fundamental freedoms is indispensable for eliminating
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. We firmly reiterate our determination
to promote their full and equal enjoyment of civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights, as well as the benefits of sustainable development, while
fully respecting their distinctive characteristics and their own initiatives;
41. We emphasize
that, in order for indigenous peoples to freely express their own identity and
exercise their rights, they should be free from all forms of discrimination,
which necessarily entails respect for their human rights and fundamental
freedoms. Efforts are now being
made to secure universal recognition for those rights in the negotiations on
the draft declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples, including the
following: to call themselves by
their own names; to participate freely and on an equal footing in their
country’s political, economic, social and cultural development; to
maintain their own forms of organization, lifestyles, cultures and traditions;
to maintain and use their own languages; to maintain their own economic
structures in the areas where they live; to take part in the development of
their educational systems and programmes; to manage their lands and natural
resources, including hunting and fishing rights; and to have access to justice
on a basis of equality;
42. We also
recognize the special relationship that indigenous peoples have with the land
as the basis for their spiritual, physical and cultural existence and encourage
States, wherever possible, to ensure that indigenous peoples are able to retain
ownership of their lands and of those natural resources to which they are
entitled under domestic law;
43. We welcomes
the decision to create the Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues within the
United Nations system, giving concrete expression to major objectives of the
International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People and the Vienna
Programme of Action;
44. We welcome
the appointment by the United Nations of the Special Rapporteur on the
situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people and
express our commitment to cooperate with the Special Rapporteur;
45. We
recognizes the positive economic, social and cultural contributions made by
migrants to both countries of origin and destination;
46. We reaffirm
the sovereign right of each State to formulate and apply its own legal
framework and policies for migration, and further affirm that these policies
should be consistent with applicable human rights instruments, norms and
standards, and designed to ensure that they are free of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
47. We note
with concern and strongly condemn the manifestations and acts of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance against migrants and the
stereotypes often applied to them; reaffirm the responsibility of States to
protect the human rights of migrants under their jurisdiction and reaffirm the
responsibility of Governments to safeguard and protect migrants against illegal
or violent acts, in particular acts of racial discrimination and crimes
perpetrated with racist or xenophobic motivation by individuals or groups; and we stress the need for their fair, just and equitable
treatment in society and in the workplace;
48. We
highlight the importance of creating conditions conducive to greater harmony,
tolerance and respect between migrants and the rest of society in the countries
in which they find themselves, in order to eliminate manifestations of racism
and xenophobia against migrants.
We underline that family reunification has a positive effect on
integration and emphasize the need for States to facilitate family reunion;
49. We are
mindful of the situation of vulnerability in which migrants frequently find themselves,
owing, inter alia, to their departure from their countries of origin and
to the difficulties they encounter because of differences in language, customs
and culture, as well as economic and social difficulties and obstacles to the
return of migrants who are undocumented or in an irregular situation;
50. We
reaffirms the necessity of eliminating racial discrimination against migrants,
including migrant workers, in relation to issues such as employment, social
services, including education and health, as well as access to justice, and
that their treatment must be in accordance with international human rights
instruments, free from racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance;
51. We note
with concern that, among other factors, racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance contribute to forced displacement and the
movement of people from their countries of origin as refugees and
asylum-seekers;
52. We
recognize with concern that, despite efforts to combat racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, instances of various forms
of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance against
refugees, asylum-seekers and internally displaced persons, among others,
continue;
53. We
underline the urgency of addressing the root causes of displacement and of
finding durable solutions for refugees and displaced persons, in particular
voluntary return in safety and dignity to the countries of origin, as well as
resettlement in third countries and local integration, when and where
appropriate and feasible;
54. We
affirm our commitment to respect and implement humanitarian obligations
relating to the protection of refugees, asylum-seekers, returnees and
internally displaced persons, and note in this regard the importance of
international solidarity, burden-sharing and international cooperation to share
responsibility for the protection of refugees, reaffirming that the 1951
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol remain the
foundation of the international refugee regime and recognizing the importance of their full application by
States parties;
55. We
recognize the presence in many countries of a Mestizo population of mixed
ethnic and racial origins and its valuable contribution to the promotion of
tolerance and respect in these societies, and we condemn discrimination against
them, especially because such discrimination may be denied owing to its subtle
nature;
56. We are
conscious of the fact that the history of humanity is replete with major
atrocities as a result of the gross violations of human rights and believe that
lessons can be learned through remembering history to avert future tragedies;
57. We recall
that the Holocaust must never be forgotten;
58. We
recognize with deep concern religious intolerance against certain religious
communities, as well as the emergence of hostile acts and violence against such
communities because of their religious beliefs and their racial or ethnic
origin in various parts of the world which in particular limit their right to
freely practise their belief;
59. We
recognize with deep concern the increase in anti-Semitism and Islamophobia in
various parts of the world, as well as the emergence of racial and violent movements
based on racism and discriminatory ideas against Jewish, Muslim and Arab
communities;
60. We are
conscious that humanity's history is replete with terrible wrongs inflicted
through lack of respect for the equality of human beings and notes with alarm
the increase of such practices in various parts of the world, and we urge
people, particularly in conflict situations, to desist from racist incitement,
derogatory language and negative stereotyping;
61. We are
concerned about the plight of the Palestinian people under foreign occupation.
We recognize the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to
self-determination and to the establishment of an independent state and its
recognizes the right to security for all States in the region, including Israel,
and call upon all States to support the peace process and bring it to an early
conclusion;
62. We call for
a just, comprehensive and lasting peace in the region in which all peoples
shall co-exist and enjoy equality, justice and internationally recognized human
rights, and security;
63. We
recognize the right of refugees to return voluntarily to their homes and
properties in dignity and safety, and urge all States to facilitate such
return;
64. We
affirm that the ethnic,
cultural, linguistic and religious identity of minorities, where they exist,
must be protected and that persons belonging to such minorities should be
treated equally and enjoy their human rights and fundamental freedoms without
discrimination of any kind;
65. We
recognize that members of certain groups with a distinct cultural identity face
barriers arising from a complex interplay of ethnic, religious and other
factors, as well as their traditions and customs, and call upon States to
ensure that measures, policies and programmes aimed at eradicating racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance address the barriers
that this interplay of factors creates;
66. We
recognize with deep concern the ongoing manifestations of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, including violence, against
Roma/Gypsies/Sinti/Travellers and recognize the need to develop effective
policies and implementation mechanisms for their full achievement of equality;
67. We are
convinced that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance reveal themselves in a differentiated manner for women and girls,
and can be among the factors leading to a deterioration in their living
conditions, poverty, violence, multiple forms of discrimination, and the limitation
or denial of their human rights.
We recognize the need to integrate a gender perspective into relevant
policies, strategies and programmes of action against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in order to address multiple
forms of discrimination;
68. We
recognize the need to develop a more systematic and consistent approach to
evaluating and monitoring racial discrimination against women, as well as the
disadvantages, obstacles and difficulties women face in the full exercise and
enjoyment of their civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights
because of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
69. We deplore
attempts to oblige women belonging to certain faiths and religious minorities
to forego their cultural and religious identity, or to restrict their
legitimate expression, or to discriminate against them with regard to
opportunities for education and employment;
70. We note
with concern the large number of children and young people, particularly girls,
among the victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance and stress the need to incorporate special measures, in accordance
with the principles of the best interests of the child and respect for their
views, in programmes to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance, in order to give priority attention to the rights and the
situation of children and young people who are victims of these practices;
71. We
recognize that a child belonging to an ethnic, religious or linguistic minority
or who is indigenous shall not be denied the right, individually or in
community with other members of his or her group, to enjoy his or her own
culture, to profess and practise his or her own religion, or to use his or her
own language;
72. We recognize that child labour is linked to
poverty, lack of development and related socio-economic conditions and could in
some cases perpetuate poverty and racial discrimination by disproportionately denying
children from affected groups the opportunity to acquire the human capabilities
needed in productive life and to benefit from economic growth;
73. We
note with deep concern the fact that, in many countries, people infected or
affected by HIV/AIDS, as well as those who are presumed to be infected, belong
to groups vulnerable to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, which has a negative impact and impedes their access to health
care and medication;
74. We
recognize that inequitable political, economic, cultural and social conditions
can breed and foster racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, which in turn exacerbate the inequity. We believe that genuine equality of opportunity for all, in
all spheres, including that for development, is fundamental for the eradication
of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
75. We affirm
that universal adherence to and full implementation of the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination are of
paramount importance for promoting equality and non-discrimination in the
world;
76. We
affirm the solemn commitment of all States to promote universal respect for,
and observance and protection of, all human rights, economic, social, cultural,
civil and political, including the right to development, as a fundamental
factor in the prevention and elimination of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
77. We
firmly believe that the obstacles to overcoming racial discrimination and achieving
racial equality mainly lie in the lack of political will, weak legislation and
lack of implementation strategies and concrete action by States, as well as the
prevalence of racist attitudes and negative stereotyping;
78. We firmly
believe that education, development and the faithful implementation of our
international human rights norms and obligations, including enactment of laws
and political, social and economic policies, are crucial to combat racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
79. We
recognize that democracy, transparent, responsible, accountable and
participatory governance responsive to the needs and aspirations of the people,
and respect for human rights, fundamental freedoms and the rule of law are
essential for the effective prevention and elimination of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. We reaffirm that any form of impunity for crimes motivated
by racist and xenophobic attitudes plays a role in weakening the rule of law
and democracy and tends to encourage the recurrence of such acts;
80. We affirm
that the Dialogue among Civilizations constitutes a process to attain
identification and promotion of common grounds among civilizations, recognition
and promotion of the inherent dignity and of the equal rights of all human
beings and respect for fundamental principles of justice; in this way, it can
dispel notions of cultural superiority based on racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance, and facilitate the building of a reconciled
world for the human family;
81. We
underline the key role that political leaders and political parties can and
ought to play in combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance and encourage political parties to take concrete steps to
promote solidarity, tolerance and respect;
82. We
condemn the persistence and resurgence of neo-nazism, neo-fascism and violent
nationalist ideologies based on racial or national prejudice, and state that
these phenomena can never be justified in any instance or in any circumstances;
83. We condemn
political platforms and organizations based on racism, xenophobia or doctrines
of racial superiority and related discrimination, as well as legislation and
practices based on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, as incompatible with democracy and transparent and accountable
governance. We reaffirm that
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance condoned by
governmental policies violate human rights and may endanger friendly relations
among peoples, cooperation among nations and international peace and security;
84. We
recall that the dissemination of all ideas based upon racial superiority or
hatred shall be declared an offence punishable by law with due regard to the
principles embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the rights
expressly set forth in article 5 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination;
85. We note
that Article 4 (b) of the International Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Racial Discrimination places an obligation upon States to be vigilant
and to proceed against organizations that disseminate ideas based on racial
superiority or hatred, acts of violence or incitement to such acts. These organizations shall be condemned
and discouraged;
86. We
recognize that the media should represent the diversity of a multicultural
society and play a role in fighting racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance. In this
regard we draw attention to the power of advertising;
87. We note
with regret that certain media, by promoting false images and negative
stereotypes of vulnerable groups and individuals, particularly of migrants and
refugees, have contributed to the spread of xenophobic and racist sentiments
among the public and in some cases have encouraged violence by racist
individuals and groups;
88. We
recognize the positive contribution that the exercise of the right to freedom
of expression, particularly by the media and new technologies, including the
Internet, and full respect for the freedom to seek, receive and impart
information can make to the fight against racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance; we reiterate the need to respect the
editorial independence and autonomy of the media in this regard;
89. We express deep concern about the use of new information technologies, such as the Internet, for purposes contrary to respect for human values, equality, non-discrimination, respect for others and tolerance, including to propagate racism, racial hatred, xenophobia, racial discrimination and related intolerance, and that, particularly, children and youth having access to this material could be negatively influenced by it;
90. We
also recognize the need to promote the use of new information and communication
technologies, including the Internet, to contribute to the fight against
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance; in
fulfilling this need, new technologies can assist the promotion of tolerance
and respect for human dignity, and the principles of equality and
non-discrimination;
91. We affirm
that all States should recognize the
importance of community media that give a voice to victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
92. We reaffirm
that the stigmatization of people of different origins by acts or omissions of
public authorities, institutions, the media, political parties or national or
local organizations is not only an act of racial discrimination but can also
incite the recurrence of such acts, thereby resulting in the creation of a
vicious circle which reinforces racist attitudes and prejudices, and which must
be condemned;
93. We
recognize that education at all levels and all ages, including within the
family, in particular human rights education, is a key to changing attitudes
and behaviour based on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance and to promoting tolerance and respect for diversity in societies;
we further affirm that such education is a determining factor in the promotion,
dissemination and protection of the democratic values of justice and equity,
which are essential to prevent and combat the spread of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
94. We
recognize that quality education, the elimination of illiteracy and access to
free primary education for all can contribute to more inclusive societies,
equity, stable and harmonious relations and friendship among nations, peoples,
groups and individuals, and a culture of peace, fostering mutual understanding,
solidarity, social justice and respect for all human rights for all;
95. We
underline the links between the right to education and the struggle against
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and the
essential/crucial role of education, including human rights education and
education which is sensitive to and respects cultural diversity,
especially amongst children and young people in the
prevention and eradication of all forms of intolerance and
discrimination;
96. We
emphasize the importance and necessity of teaching about the facts and truth of
the history of humankind from antiquity to the recent past, as well as of
teaching about the facts and truth
of the history, causes, nature and consequences of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, with a view to achieving a
comprehensive and objective cognizance of the tragedies of the past;
97. We
acknowledge and profoundly regret the massive human sufferings and the tragic
plight of millions of men, women and children caused by slavery, slave trade,
transatlantic slave trade, apartheid, colonialism and genocide and call upon
States concerned to honour the memory of the victims of past tragedies and
affirm that wherever and whenever these occurred they must be condemned and
their reoccurrence prevented. We regret that these practices and structures,
political, socio-economic and cultural, have led to racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
98. We
acknowledge and profoundly regret the untold, suffering and evils inflicted on
millions of men, women and children as a result of slavery, slave trade,
transatlantic slave trade, apartheid, genocide and past tragedies. We further
note that some States have taken the initiative to apologize and have paid
reparation where appropriate, for grave and massive violations committed.
99. With a view
to closing these dark chapters of History and as a means of reconciliation and
healing, we invite the international community and its members to honour the
memory of victims of these tragedies. We further note that some have taken the
initiative of regretting or expressing remorse or presenting apologies, and
calls on all those who have not yet contributed to restoring the dignity of the
victims to find appropriate ways to do so and, to this end, we appreciate those
countries that have done so;
100. We are aware of the
moral obligation on the part of all concerned States, and call on these States
to take appropriate and effective measures to halt and reverse the lasting
consequences of these practices;
101. We recognize the
consequences of past and contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance as serious challenges to global peace and
security, human dignity and the realisation of human rights and fundamental
freedoms of many people in the world, in particular to Africans, peoples of
African descent, people of Asian descent and indigenous peoples.
102. We also strongly
reaffirm as a pressing requirement of justice that victims of human rights
violations resulting from racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, especially in the light of their vulnerable situation, socially,
culturally and economically, should be assured of having access to justice,
including legal assistance where appropriate, effective and appropriate
protection and remedies, including the right to seek just and adequate
reparation or satisfaction for any damage suffered as a result of such
discrimination, as enshrined in numerous international and regional human
rights instruments, in particular the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination;
103. Guided by the
principles set out in the Millennium Declaration and the recognition that we
have a collective responsibility to uphold the principles of human dignity,
equality and equity and to ensure that globalization becomes a positive force
for all the world's people, the International Community commits itself to
working for the beneficial integration of the developing countries into the
global economy, resisting their marginalization, determined to achieve
accelerated economic growth and sustainable development and to eradicate
poverty, inequality and deprivation;
104. We emphasizes that
remembering the crimes or wrongs of the past, wherever and whenever they
occurred, unequivocally condemning its racist tragedies and telling the truth
about history are essential elements for international reconciliation and the
creation of societies based on justice, equality and solidarity;
105. We recognize the
efforts of developing countries, in particular, the commitment and the
determination of the African leaders to seriously address the challenges of
poverty, underdevelopment, marginalization, social exclusion, economic
disparities, instability and insecurity, through initiatives such as the New
African Initiative and other innovative mechanisms such as the World Solidarity
Fund for the Eradication of Poverty, and calls upon developed countries, the
United Nations and its Specialized Agencies as well as international financial
institutions to provide, through their operational programmes, new and
additional financial resources as appropriate to support these initiatives;
106. We underscore the need
to design, promote and implement at the national, regional and international
levels strategies, programmes and policies, and adequate legislation, which may
include special and positive measures, for furthering equal social development
and the realization of the civil and political, economic, social and cultural
rights of all victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, including through more effective access to the political, judicial
and administrative institutions, as well as the need to promote effective
access to justice, as well as to guarantee that the benefits of development,
science and technology contribute effectively to the improvement of the quality
of life for all, without discrimination;
107. We
recognize the necessity for special measures or positive actions for the
victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in
order to promote their full integration into society. Those measures for effective action including social
measures, should aim at correcting the conditions that impair the enjoyment of
rights and the introduction of special measures to encourage equal
participation of all racial and cultural, linguistic and religious groups in
all sectors of society and to bring all onto an equal footing. Those measures should include measures
to achieve appropriate representation in educational institutions, housing,
political parties, parliaments, employment, especially in the judiciary,
police, army and other civil services, which in some cases might involve
electoral reforms, land reforms and campaigns for equal participation;
108. We
recall the importance of enhancing international cooperation to promote (a) the
fight against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance; (b) the effective implementation by States of international
treaties and instruments that forbid these practices; (c) the goals of the
Charter of the United Nations in this regard; (d) the achievement of the goals
established by the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, the World Conference on Human Rights held in
Vienna in 1993, the International Conference on Population and Development held
in Cairo in 1994, the World Summit for Social Development held in Copenhagen in
1995, the Fourth World Conference on Women held in Beijing in 1995, and the
United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II) held in Istanbul in
1996 ; and the World Food Summit, held in Rome from 13 to 17 November 1996,
making sure that such goals encompass with equity all the victims of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
109. We
recognize the importance of cooperation among States, relevant international
and regional organizations, the international financial institutions,
non-governmental organizations and individuals in the worldwide fight against
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and that
success in this fight requires specifically taking into consideration the
grievances, opinions and demands of the victims of such discrimination;
110. We reiterate that the
international response and policy, including financial assistance, towards
refugees and displaced persons in different parts of the world should not be
based on discrimination on the grounds of race, colour, descent, or national or
ethnic origin of the refugees and displaced persons concerned and, in this
context, urges the international community to increase the provision of
adequate assistance on an equitable basis to host countries, in particular to
host developing countries and
countries in transition;
111. We recognize the
importance of independent national human rights institutions conforming to the
Principles relating to the status of national institutions for the promotion
and protection of human rights, annexed to General Assembly resolution
48/134 of 20 December 1993, and other relevant specialized
institutions created by law for the promotion and protection of human rights,
including ombudsman institutions, in the struggle against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, as well as for the
promotion of democratic values and the rule of law. We encourage States, as appropriate, to establish such
institutions and call upon the authorities and society in general in those
countries where they are performing their tasks of promotion, protection and
prevention to cooperate to the maximum extent possible with these institutions,
while respecting their independence;
112. We
recognize the important role relevant regional bodies, including regional
associations of national human rights institutions, can play in combating
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and the key
role they can play in monitoring and raising awareness about intolerance and
discrimination at the regional level, and reaffirm support for such bodies
where they exist and encourage their establishment;
113. We recognize the
paramount role of Parliaments in the fight against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in adopting appropriate
legislation, overseeing its implementation and allocating the requisite
financial resources;
114. We stress the importance of involving social partners
and other non-governmental organizations in the design and implementation of
training and development programmes;
117. We recognize the
fundamental role of civil society in the fight against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in particular in assisting
Governments to develop regulations and strategies, in taking measures and
action against such forms of discrimination and through follow-up
implementation;
116. We also recognize that
promoting greater respect and trust among
different groups within society must be a shared but differentiated
responsibility of government institutions, political leaders, grass-roots
organizations and citizens. We underline that civil society plays an important
role in promoting the public interest, especially in combating racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
117. We welcome
the catalytic role that non-governmental organizations play in promoting human
rights education and raising awareness about racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance.
They can also play an important role in raising awareness of such issues
in the relevant bodies of the United Nations, based upon their national,
regional or international experiences.
Bearing in mind the difficulties they face, we commit ourselves to
creating an atmosphere conducive to the effective functioning of human rights
non-governmental organizations, in particular anti-racist non-governmental
organizations, in combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance. We recognize
the precarious situation of human rights non-governmental organizations,
including anti-racist non-governmental organizations, in many parts of the
world and express our commitment to adhere to our international obligations and
to lift any unlawful barriers to their effective functioning;
118. We encourage the full
participation of non-governmental organizations in the follow-up to the World
Conference;
119. We
recognize that international and national exchange and dialogue, and the
development of a global network among youth are important and fundamental
elements in building intercultural understanding and respect, and will
contribute to the elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance;
120. We underline the
usefulness of involving youth in the development of forward-looking national,
regional and international strategies and in policies to fight racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
121 We affirm that
our global drive for the total elimination of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance is undertaken, and the recommendations
contained in the Programme of Action are made in a spirit of solidarity and
international cooperation and are inspired by the purposes and principles of
the Charter of the United Nations and other relevant international
instruments. These recommendations
are made with due consideration for the past, the present and the future, and
with a constructive and forward-looking approach. We recognize that the formulation and implementation of
these strategies, policies, programmes and actions, which should be carried out
efficiently and promptly, are the responsibility of all States, with the full
involvement of civil society at the national, regional and international
levels.
I. SOURCES,
CAUSES, FORMS AND CONTEMPORARY MANIFESTATIONS OF RACISM, RACIAL DISCRIMINATION,
XENOPHOBIA AND RELATED INTOLERANCE
Recognizing the urgent need to translate the objectives of the Declaration into a practical and workable Programme of Action, the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance:
1.
Urges
States in their national efforts, and in cooperation with other States,
regional and international organizations and financial institutions, to promote
the use of public and private investment in consultation with the affected
communities in order to eradicate poverty, particularly in those areas in which
victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance
predominantly live;
2. Urges States to take all necessary and appropriate measures to end enslavement and contemporary forms of slavery-like practices to initiate constructive dialogue among States and implement measures with a view to correcting the problem and the damage resulting from them;
3. Urges States to work nationally and in cooperation with other States and relevant regional and international organizations and programmes to strengthen national mechanisms to promote and protect the human rights of victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance who are infected, or presumably infected, with pandemic diseases such as HIV/AIDS and to take concrete measures, including preventive action, appropriate access to medication and treatment, programmes of education, training and mass media dissemination to eliminate violence, stigmatization, discrimination, unemployment and other negative consequences arising from these pandemics;
4.
Urges
States to facilitate the participation of people of African descent in all
political, economic, social and cultural aspects of society and in the
advancement and economic development of their countries, and to promote a
greater knowledge of and respect for their heritage and culture;
5. Requests States, supported
by international cooperation as appropriate, to consider positively
concentrating additional investments in health‑care systems, education,
public health, electricity, drinking water and environmental control, as well
as other affirmative or positive action initiatives in communities of primarily
African descent;
6. Calls upon the United
Nations, international financial and development institutions and other
appropriate international mechanisms to develop capacity-building programmes
intended for Africans and people of African descent in the Americas and around
the world;
7. Requests the Commission on
Human Rights to consider establishing a working group or other mechanism of the
United Nations 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 racial discrimination against people of African descent;
8. Urges financial and development
institutions and the operational programmes and specialized agencies of the
United Nations, in accordance with their regular budgets and the procedures of
their governing bodies, to:
(a) Assign particular priority, and allocate sufficient funding, within their areas of competence and budgets, to improving the situation of Africans and people of African descent, while devoting special attention to the needs of these populations in developing countries, inter alia through the preparation of specific programmes of action;
(b) Carry out special projects, through appropriate channels and in collaboration with Africans and people of African descent, to support their initiatives at the community level and to facilitate the exchange of information and technical know‑how between these populations and experts in these areas;
(c) Develop programmes intended for people of African descent allocating additional investments to health systems, education, housing, electricity, drinking water and environmental control measures and promoting equal opportunities in employment, as well as other affirmative or positive action initiatives;
9. Requests States to increase
public actions and policies in favour of women and young males of African
descent, given that racism affects them more deeply, placing them in a more
marginalized and disadvantaged situation;
10. Urges States to ensure access to
education and promote access to new technologies that would offer Africans and
people of African descent, in particular women and children, adequate resources
for education, technological development and long‑distance learning in
local communities, and further urges States to promote the full and accurate
inclusion of the history and contribution of Africans and people of African
descent in the education curriculum;
11. Encourages States to identify factors which
prevent equal access to, and the equitable presence of, people of African
descent at all levels of the public sector, including the public service, and
in particular the administration of justice, and to take appropriate measures
to remove the obstacles identified and also to encourage the private sector to
promote equal access to, and the equitable presence of, people of African
descent at all levels within their organizations;
12. Calls upon States to take specific steps to ensure full and effective access to the justice system for all individuals, particularly those of African descent;
13. Urges States, in accordance with international human rights standards and their respective domestic legal framework, to resolve problems of ownership of ancestral lands inhabited for generations by people of African descent and to promote the productive utilization of land and the comprehensive development of these communities, respecting their culture and their specific forms of decision‑making;
14. Urges States to recognize the particularly severe problems of religious prejudice and intolerance that many people of African descent experience and to implement policies and measures that are designed to prevent and eliminate all such discrimination on the basis of religion and belief, which, when combined with certain other forms of discrimination, constitutes a form of multiple discrimination;
Indigenous peoples
15. Urges States:
(a) To adopt or continue to apply, in concert with them, constitutional, administrative, legislative, judicial and all necessary measures to promote, protect and ensure the enjoyment by indigenous peoples of their rights, as well as to guarantee them the exercise of their human rights and fundamental freedoms on the basis of equality, non‑discrimination and full and free participation in all areas of society, in particular in matters affecting or concerning their interests;
(b) To promote better knowledge of and respect for indigenous cultures and heritage; and welcomes measures already taken by States in these respects;
16.
Urges
States to work with indigenous peoples to stimulate their access to economic
activities and increase their level of employment, where appropriate, through
the establishment, acquisition or expansion by indigenous peoples of
enterprises, and the implementation of measures such as training, the provision
of technical assistance and credit facilities;
17. Urges
States to work with indigenous peoples to establish and implement programmes
that provide access to training and services that could benefit the development
of their communities;
18. Requests
States to adopt public policies and give impetus to programmes on behalf of and
in concert with indigenous women and girls, with a view to promoting their
civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights; to putting an end to
their situation of disadvantage for reasons of gender and ethnicity; to dealing
with urgent problems affecting them in regard to education, their physical and
mental health, economic life and in the matter of violence against them,
including domestic violence; and to eliminating the situation of aggravated
discrimination suffered by indigenous women and girls on multiple grounds of
racism and gender discrimination;
19. Recommends that States examine, in conformity with relevant
international human rights instruments, norms and standards, their
Constitutions, laws, legal systems and policies in order to identify and
eradicate racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance
towards indigenous peoples and individuals, whether implicit, explicit or
inherent;
20. Calls upon concerned States to honour and respect their
treaties and agreements with indigenous peoples and to accord them due
recognition and observance;
21. Calls upon States to give full and appropriate consideration
to the recommendations produced by indigenous peoples in their own forums on
the World Conference;
22. Requests
States:
(a) To develop and, where they already exist, support institutional mechanisms to promote the accomplishment of the objectives and measures relating to indigenous peoples agreed in this Plan of Action;
(b) To 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 and to make regular assessments of the progress achieved in this regard;
(c) To promote understanding among society at large of the importance of special measures to overcome disadvantages faced by indigenous peoples;
(d) To consult indigenous representatives in the process of decision‑making concerning policies and measures that directly affect them;
23. Calls
upon States to recognize the particular challenges faced by indigenous
peoples and individuals living in urban environments and urges States to
implement effective strategies to combat the racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance they encounter, paying particular attention
to opportunities for their continued practice of their traditional, cultural,
linguistic and spiritual ways of life;
24. Requests
all States to combat manifestations of a generalized rejection of migrants and
actively to discourage all racist demonstrations and acts that generate
xenophobic behaviour and negative sentiments towards, or rejection of,
migrants;
25. Invites
international and national non‑governmental organizations to include
monitoring and protection of the human rights of migrants in their programmes
and activities and to sensitize Governments and increase public awareness in
all States about the need to prevent racist acts and manifestations of
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance against migrants;
26. Requests
States to promote and protect fully and effectively the human rights and
fundamental freedoms of all migrants, in conformity with the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and their obligations under international human
rights instruments, regardless of the migrants’ immigration status;
27. Encourages
States to promote education on the human rights of migrants and to engage in
information campaigns to ensure that the public receives accurate information
regarding migrants and migration issues, including the positive contribution of
migrants to the host society and the vulnerability of migrants, particularly
those who are in an irregular situation;
28. Calls
upon States to facilitate family reunification, in an expeditious and effective manner which has a positive
effect on integration of migrants, with due regard for the desire of many
family members to have an independent status;
29. Urges
States to take concrete measures that would eliminate racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in the workplace, against
all workers, including migrants, and ensure the full equality of all before the
law, including labour law, and further urges States to eliminate barriers,
where appropriate, to:
participating in vocational training, collective bargaining, employment,
contracts and trade union activity; accessing judicial and administrative
tribunals dealing with grievances; seeking employment in different parts of
their country of residence; and working in safe and healthy conditions;
30. Urges States:
(a) To develop and implement policies and action plans, and to reinforce and implement preventive measures, in order to foster greater harmony and tolerance between migrants and host societies, with the aim of eliminating manifestations of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, including acts of violence, perpetrated in many societies by individuals or groups ;
(b) To review and revise, where necessary, their immigration laws, policies and practices so that they are free of racial discrimination and compatible with States’ obligations under international human rights instruments;
(c) To implement specific measures involving the host community and migrants in order to encourage respect for cultural diversity, to promote the fair treatment of migrants and to develop programmes, where appropriate, that facilitate their integration into social, cultural, political and economic life;
(d) To ensure that migrants, regardless of their immigration status, detained by public authorities, are treated with humanity and in a fair manner, and receive effective legal protection and, where appropriate, the assistance of a competent interpreter in accordance with the relevant norms of international law and human rights standards, particularly during interrogation;
(e) To ensure that the police and immigration authorities treat migrants in a dignified and non‑discriminatory manner, in accordance with international standards, through, inter alia, organizing specialized training courses for administrators, police officers, immigration officials and other interested groups;
(f) To consider the question of, with a view to promoting the recognition of the educational, professional and technical credentials of migrants, with a view to maximizing their contribution to their new States of residence;
(g) To take all possible measures to promote the full enjoyment by all migrants of all human rights, including those related to fair wages and equal remuneration for work of equal value without distinction of any kind, and with the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widow-hood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control, social security, including social insurance, access to education, health care, social services and respect for their cultural identity;
(h) To consider adopting and implementing immigration policies and programmes that would enable immigrants, in particular women and children who are victims of spousal or domestic violence, to free themselves from abusive relationships;
31. Urges
States, in the light of the increased proportion of women migrants, to place
special focus on gender issues, including gender discrimination, particularly
when the multiple barriers faced by migrant women intersect; detailed research
should be undertaken not only in respect of human rights violations perpetrated
against women migrants, but also on the contribution they make to the economies
of their countries of origin and destination/host countries, and the findings
should be included in reports to treaty bodies;
32. Urges
States to recognize the same economic opportunities and responsibilities to
documented long‑term migrants as to other members of society;
33. Recommends that host countries for migrants consider the provision of adequate social services, in particular, in the areas of health, education and adequate housing, as a matter of priority, in cooperation with the United Nations agencies, the regional organisations and international financial bodies, also requests that these agencies provide an adequate response to requests for such services.
Refugees
34. Urges States to comply with their
obligations under international human rights, refugee and humanitarian law
relating to refugees, asylum‑seekers and displaced persons, and urges the
international community to provide them with protection and assistance in an
equitable manner and with due regard to their needs in different parts of the
world, in keeping with principles of international solidarity, burden sharing
and international cooperation to share responsibilities;
35. Calls upon
States to recognize the racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance that refugees may face as they endeavour to engage in the life of
the societies of their host countries and encourages States to develop
strategies to address this discrimination and to facilitate the full enjoyment
of the human rights of refugees, in accordance with their international
obligations and commitments. State
parties should ensure that all measures relating to refugees must be in full
accordance with the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its
1967 Protocol.
36. Urges
States to take effective steps to protect refugee and internally displaced
women and girls from violence, to investigate any such violations and to bring
those responsible to justice, in collaboration, when appropriate, with the
relevant and competent organizations;
37. Urges
States to take all possible measures to ensure that all persons, without any
discrimination, are registered and have access to the necessary documentation
reflecting their legal identity to enable them to benefit from available legal
procedures, remedies and development opportunities, as well as to reduce the
incidence of trafficking;
38. Recognizes that victims of
trafficking are particularly exposed to racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance.
States shall ensure that all measures taken against trafficking in
persons, in particular those that affect the victims of such trafficking, are
consistent with internationally recognized principles of non‑discrimination,
including the prohibition of racial discrimination and the availability of
appropriate legal redress;
39. Calls
upon States to ensure that Roma/Gypsy/Sinti/Traveller children and youth,
especially girls, are given equal access to education and that educational
curricula at all levels, including complementary programmes on intercultural
education, which might, inter alia, include opportunities for them to
learn the official languages in the pre‑school period and to recruit Roma
teachers and classroom assistants in order for such children and youth to learn
their mother‑tongue, are sensitive and responsive to their needs;
40. Encourages
States, to adopt appropriate and concrete policies and measures, to develop
implementation mechanisms, where these do not already exist, and to exchange
experiences, in cooperation with representatives of the
Roma/Gypsies/Sinti/Travellers, in order to eradicate discrimination against
them, enable them to achieve equality and ensure their full enjoyment of all
their human rights, as recommended in the case of the Roma by the Committee on
the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in its General Recommendation XXVII,
so that their needs are met;
41. Recommends
that the intergovernmental organizations address, as appropriate, in
their projects of cooperation with and assistance to various States, the
situation of the Roma/Gypsies/Sinti/Travellers and promote their economic,
social and cultural advancement;
42. Calls
upon States and encourages non‑governmental organizations to raise
awareness about the racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance experienced by the Roma/Gypsies/Sinti/Travellers, and to promote
knowledge and respect for their culture and history;
43. Encourages the media to promote equal access to and participation in the media for the Roma/Gypsies/Sinti/Travellers, as well as to protect them from racist, stereotypical and discriminatory media reporting, and calls upon States to facilitate the media’s efforts in this regard;
44. Invites Government efforts to design
policies aimed at combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance that are based on reliable statistical data recognizing the
concerns identified in consultation with the Roma/Gypsies/Sinti/Travellers
themselves reflecting as accurately as possible their status in society. All
such information shall be collected in accordance with provisions on human
rights and fundamental freedoms, such as data protection regulations and
privacy guarantees and in consultations with the persons concerned;
45. Encourages States
to address the problems of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance against people of Asian descent and urges States to take
all necessary measures to eliminate the barriers that such persons face in
participating in economic, social, cultural and political life.
46. Urges
States to ensure within their jurisdiction, that persons belonging to national
or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities can exercise fully and
effectively all human rights and fundamental freedoms without any
discrimination and in full equality before the law, and also urges States and
the international community to promote and protect the rights of such persons;
47. States
should guarantee the rights of persons belonging to national or ethnic, religious
and linguistic minorities, individually or in community with other members of
their group, to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practise their own
religion, and to use their own language, in private and in public, freely and
without interference, and to participate effectively in the cultural, social,
economic and political life of the country in which they live in order to
protect them from any form of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance that they are or may be subjected to;
48. Urges States
to recognize the effect that discrimination, marginalization and social
exclusion have had and continue to have on many racial groups living in a
numerically based minority situation within a State, and to ensure that persons
in such groups can exercise, as individual members of such groups, fully and
effectively all human rights and fundamental freedoms without distinction and
in full equality before the law, and to take, where applicable, appropriate
measures in respect of employment, housing and education with a view to prevent
racial discrimination;
49. Urges
States to take, where applicable, appropriate measures to prevent racial
discrimination against persons belonging to, national or ethnic, religious and
linguistic minorities in respect of employment, housing, social services and
education and in this context forms of multiple discrimination should be taken
into account;
50. Urges
States to incorporate a gender perspective in all programmes of action against
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and to
consider the burden of such discrimination which falls particularly on
indigenous women, African women, Asian women, women of African descent, women
of Asian descent, women migrants and women from other disadvantaged groups,
ensuring their access to the resources of production on an equal footing with
men, as a means of promoting their participation in the economic and productive
development of their communities;
51. Urges
States to involve women, especially women victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in decision‑making at
all levels when working towards the eradication of such discrimination, and to
develop concrete measures to incorporate race/gender analysis in the
implementation of all aspects of the Programme of Action and national plans of
action, particularly in the fields of employment programmes and services and
resource allocation;
52.
Recognizing that poverty shapes economic and social status and establishes
obstacles to the effective political participation of women and men in
different ways and to different extents, urges States to undertake gender
analyses on all economic and social policies and programmes, especially poverty
eradication measures, including those designed and implemented to benefit those
individuals or groups of individuals who are victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
53. Urges States and encourages all sectors of society to empower women and girls who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, so that they can fully exercise their rights in all spheres of public and private life, and to ensure the full, equal and effective participation of women in decision‑making at all levels, in particular in the design, implementation and evaluation of policies and measures which affect their lives;
54. Urges States:
(a) To recognize that sexual violence which has been systematically used as a weapon of war, sometimes with the acquiescence or at the instigation of the State, is a serious violation of international humanitarian law which, in defined circumstances, constitutes a crime against humanity and/or a war crime, and that the intersection of discrimination on grounds of race and gender makes women and girls particularly vulnerable to this type of violence which is often related to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
(b) To end impunity and prosecute those responsible for crimes against humanity and war crimes, including crimes related to sexual and other gender-based violence against women and girls, as well as to ensure that persons in authority who are responsible for such crimes, including by committing, ordering, soliciting, inducing, aiding in, abetting, assisting or in any other way contributing to the commission or attempted commission are identified, investigated, prosecuted and punished;
55. Requests
States, in collaboration where necessary with international organizations,
having the best interests of the child as a primary consideration, to provide
protection against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance against children, especially those in circumstances of particular
vulnerability, and to pay special attention to the situation of such children
when designing relevant policies, strategies and programmes;
56. Urges
States, in accordance with their national law and
their obligations under the relevant international instruments, to take all
measures to the maximum extent of their available resources to guarantee,
without any discrimination, the equal right of all children to the immediate
registration of birth, in order to enable them to exercise their human rights
and fundamental freedoms. States shall grant women equal rights with men with
respect to nationality;
57. Urges
States and international and regional organizations, and encourages non‑governmental
organizations and the private sector to address the situation of persons with
disabilities who are also subject to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance; also urges States to take necessary measures to ensure
their full enjoyment of all human rights and to facilitate their full
integration into all fields of
life;
58. Urges States to adopt and implement,
at both the national and international levels, effective measures and policies,
in addition to existing anti‑discrimination national legislation and
relevant international instruments and mechanisms, which encourage all citizens
and institutions to take a stand against racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance, and to recognize, respect and maximize the
benefits of diversity within and among all nations in working together to build
a harmonious and productive future by putting into practice and promoting
values and principles such as justice, equality and non‑discrimination,
democracy, fairness and friendship, tolerance and respect within and between
communities and nations, in particular through public information and education
programmes to raise awareness and understanding of the benefits of cultural
diversity, including programmes where the public authorities work in
partnership with international and non‑governmental organizations and
other sectors of civil society;
59. Urges States
to mainstream a gender perspective in the design and development of measures of
prevention, education and protection aimed at the eradication of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance at all levels, to ensure
that they effectively target the distinct situations of women and men.
60. Urges
States to adopt or strengthen, as appropriate, national programmes for
eradicating poverty and reducing social exclusion which take account of the
needs and experiences of groups or individuals who are victims of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and also urges that
they expand their efforts to foster bilateral, regional and international
cooperation in implementing those programmes;
61. Urges
States to work to ensure that their political and legal systems reflect the
multicultural diversity within their societies and where necessary to improve
democratic institutions so that they are more fully participatory and avoid
marginalization, exclusion and discrimination against specific sectors of
society;
62. Urges
States to take all necessary measures to address specifically, through policies
and programmes, racism and racially motivated violence against women and girls
and to increase cooperation, policy responses and effective implementation of
national legislation and of their obligations under relevant international
instruments, and other protective and preventive measures aimed at the
elimination of all forms of racially motivated discrimination and violence
against women and girls;
63. Encourages
the business sector, in particular the tourist industry and Internet providers,
to develop codes of conduct, with a view to preventing trafficking in persons
and protecting the victims of such traffic, especially those in prostitution, against
gender‑based and racial discrimination and promoting their rights,
dignity and security;
64. Urges
States to devise, enforce and strengthen effective measures at the national,
regional and international levels to prevent, combat and eliminate all forms of
trafficking in women and children, in particular girls, through comprehensive
anti‑trafficking strategies which include legislative measures,
prevention campaigns and information exchange. It also urges States to allocate resources, as appropriate,
to provide comprehensive programmes designed to provide assistance to,
protection for, healing, reintegration into society and rehabilitation of
victims. States shall provide or
strengthen training for law enforcement, immigration and other relevant officials
who deal with victims of trafficking in this regard;
65. Encourages
the bodies, agencies and relevant programmes of the United Nations system and
States to promote and to make use of the “Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement” (E/CN.4/1998/53/Add.2), particularly those provisions
relating to non‑discrimination,
66. Urges
States to establish and implement without delay national policies and action
plans to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related
intolerance, including their gender‑based manifestations;
67. Urges
States to design or reinforce, promote and implement effective legislative and
administrative policies, as well as other preventive measures, against the
serious situation experienced by certain groups of workers, including migrant
workers, who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance. Special attention should be given to protecting people
engaged in domestic work and trafficked persons, from discrimination and
violence, as well as to combating prejudice against them;
68. Urges
States to adopt and implement, or strengthen, national legislation and
administrative measures that expressly and specifically counter racism and
prohibit racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance whether
direct or indirect, in all spheres of public life in accordance with their
obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Racial Discrimination ensuring that their reservations are not contrary to
the object and purpose of the Convention;
69. Urges States
to enact and implement, as appropriate, laws against trafficking in persons,
especially women and children and smuggling of migrants, taking into account,
practices that endanger human lives or lead to various kinds of servitude and
exploitation, such as debt bondage, slavery, sexual exploitation or labour
exploitation; also encourages States to create, if they do not already exist,
mechanisms to combat such practices and to allocate adequate resources to
ensure law enforcement, the protection of the rights of victims, and to
reinforce bilateral, regional and international cooperation, including with non‑governmental
organizations that assist victims, to combat this trafficking in persons and
smuggling of migrants;
70. Urges
States to take all necessary constitutional, legislative and administrative
measures to foster equality among individuals and groups who are affected by,
vulnerable to, or victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance, and to review existing measures with a view to amending or
repealing national legislation and administrative provisions that may give rise
to such forms of discrimination;
71. Urges
States, including their law enforcement agencies, to design and fully implement
effective policies and programmes to prevent, detect and ensure accountability
for misconduct by police officers and other law enforcement personnel which is
motivated by racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance
and to prosecute perpetrators of such misconduct;
72. Urges States to design, implement and enforce effective measures to eliminate the phenomenon popularly known as “racial profiling” and comprising the practice of police and other law enforcement officers relying, to any degree, on race, colour, descent or national or ethnic origin as the basis for subjecting persons to investigatory activities or for determining whether an individual is engaged in criminal activity.
73. Urges States to take measures to
prevent genetic research or its applications from being used to promote racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, to protect the
privacy of personal genetic information and to prevent such information from
being used for discriminatory or racist purposes;
74. Urges
States and invites non-governmental organizations and the private sector:
(a) To create and implement policies that promote a high-quality and diverse police force free from racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and recruit actively all groups, including minorities, into public employment, including the police force and other agencies within the criminal justice system (such as prosecutors);
(b) To work to reduce violence, including violence
motivated by racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance,
by:
i) Developing educational materials to teach young people the importance of tolerance and respect;
ii)
Addressing
bias before it manifests itself in violent criminal activity;
iii) Establishing working groups consisting of, among others, local community leaders and national and local law enforcement officials, to improve coordination, community involvement, training, education and data collection, with the aim of preventing such violent criminal activity;
iv)
Ensuring that civil rights laws that
prohibit violent criminal activity are strongly enforced;
v)
Enhancing
data collection regarding violence motivated by racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
vi)
Providing
appropriate assistance to victims, and public education to prevent future
incidents of violence motivated by racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance
75.
Urges
States that have not yet done so to consider ratifying or acceding to the
international human rights instruments which combat racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in particular to accede to
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination as a matter of urgency, with a view to universal ratification by
the year 2005, and to consider making the declaration envisaged under article
14, to comply with their reporting obligations, and to publish and act upon the
concluding observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination. It also urges
States to withdraw reservations contrary to the object and purpose of that
Convention and to consider withdrawing other reservations;
76.
Urges
States to give due consideration to the observations and recommendations of the
Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. To that effect, States should consider
setting up appropriate national monitoring and evaluation mechanisms to ensure
that all appropriate steps are taken to follow up on these observations and
recommendations;
77.
Urges
States that have not yet done so to consider becoming parties to the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as well as to consider acceding to the
Optional Protocols to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
78.
Urges
those States that have not yet done so to consider signing and ratifying or
acceding to the following instruments:
(a) Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, 1948;
(b) International Labour Organization Migration for Employment Convention (Revised), 1949 (No. 97);
(c) Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others, 1949;
(d) Convention relating to the Status of Refugees of 1951, and its 1967 Protocol;
(e) International Labour Organization Discrimination Convention (Employment and Occupation), 1958 (No. 111);
(f) Convention against Discrimination in Education, adopted on 14 December 1960 by the General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization;
(g) Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women 1979, with a view to achieving universal ratification within five years, and its Optional Protocol of 1999;
(h) Convention on the Rights of the Child of 1989 and its two Optional Protocols of 2000, and the International Labour Organization Minimum Age Convention, 1973 (No. 138) and Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention, 1999 (No. 182);
(i) International Labour Organization Migrant Workers (Supplementary Provisions) Convention, 1975 (No. 143);
(j) International
Labour Organization Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989 (No. 169)
and the Convention on Biological Diversity, 1992;
(k) International
Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members
of Their Families, 1990;
(l) The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, 1998;
(m) United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, supplementing the Convention and the Protocol against the smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, supplementing the Convention, 2000;
It further urges States Parties to these instruments to implement them fully;
79. Calls upon States to promote and
protect the exercise of the rights set out in the
Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of
Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief, proclaimed by the General Assembly
in its resolution 36/55, of 25 November 1981, in order to obviate religious discrimination which, when combined with certain
other forms of discrimination, constitutes a form of multiple discrimination;
80. Urges
States to seek full respect for, and compliance with, the Vienna Convention on
Consular Relations of 1963, especially as it relates to the right of foreign
nationals, regardless of their legal and immigration status, to communicate
with a consular officer of their own State in the case of arrest or detention;
81. Urges all States to prohibit discriminatory treatment against foreigners and migrant workers, inter alia, where appropriate, concerning the granting of work visas and work permits housing, health care and access to justice, based on race, colour, descent or national or ethnic origin;
82. Underlines
the importance of combating impunity, including for crimes with a racist or
xenophobic motivation, also at the international level noting that impunity for
violations of human rights and international humanitarian law is a serious
obstacle to a fair and equitable justice system and, ultimately, reconciliation
and stability; it also fully supports the work of the existing international
criminal tribunals and the ratification of the Statute of the International
Criminal Court; urges all States to cooperate with these international criminal
tribunals;
83. Urges States to make every effort to
fully apply the relevant provisions of the Declaration on Fundamental
Principles and Rights at Work of 1998 of the ILO, in order to combat racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
Prosecution of perpetrators of racist acts
84.
Urges
States to adopt effective measures to combat criminal acts motivated by racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, to take measures so
that such motivations be considered an aggravating factor for the purposes of
sentencing, to prevent these crimes from going unpunished and to ensure the
rule of law;
85. Urges States to undertake investigations to examine possible links between criminal prosecution, police violence and penal sanctions, on the one hand, and racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, on the other, so as to have evidence for taking the necessary steps for the eradication of any such links and discriminatory practices;
86.
Calls upon States to promote measures to deter the emergence and to
counter neo‑fascist, violent nationalist
ideologies which promote racial hatred and racial discrimination, as well as
racist and xenophobic sentiments, including measures to combat the negative
influence of such ideologies especially on young people through formal and
non-formal education, media and sport;
87.
Urges
States parties to adopt legislation implementing the
obligations they have assumed to prosecute and punish persons who have
committed or ordered to be committed grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions
of 12 August 1949 and Additional Protocol I thereto and of other serious
violations of the laws and customs of war, in particular in relation to the
principle of non‑discrimination;
88.
Calls
upon States to criminalize all forms of trafficking in persons, in particular women and children and to condemn
and penalize traffickers and intermediaries, while ensuring protection and
assistance to the victims of trafficking with full respect for their human
rights;
89.
Urges
States to carry out comprehensive, exhaustive, timely and impartial
investigations of all unlawful acts of racism and racial discrimination, to
prosecute criminal offences ex officio, as appropriate, or initiate
or facilitate all appropriate actions arising from offences of a racist or
xenophobic nature, to ensure that criminal and civil investigations, and
prosecutions of offences of a racist or xenophobic nature are given high
priority and are actively and consistently undertaken, and ensure the right to
equal treatment before the tribunals and all other organs administering
justice. In this regard, the World
Conference underlines the importance of fostering awareness and providing
training to the various agents in the criminal justice system to ensure fair
and impartial application of the law.
In this respect, it recommends that anti‑discrimination monitoring
services be established;
90.
Urges
States, as appropriate, to establish, strengthen, review and reinforce the
effectiveness of independent national human rights institutions, particularly
on issues of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance,
in conformity with the Principles relating to the status of national
institutions for the promotion and protection of human rights, annexed to
General Assembly resolution 48/134 of 20 December 1993, and to provide them
with adequate financial resources, competence and capacity for investigation,
research, education and public awareness activities to combat these phenomena;
91.
Also
urges States:
(a) To foster cooperation between these institutions and other national institutions;
(b) To take steps to ensure that those groups or individuals who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance can participate fully in these institutions;
(c) To support these institutions and similar bodies, inter alia through the publication and circulation of existing national laws and jurisprudence, and cooperation with institutions in other countries so that knowledge can be gained of the manifestations, functions and mechanisms of these practices and the strategies designed to prevent, combat and eradicate them;
92. Urges States to collect, compile, analyse, disseminate and publish reliable statistical data at the national and local levels and undertake all other related measures which are necessary to assess regularly the situation of individuals and groups who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance .
(a) Such statistical data should be disaggregated in accordance with national legislation. Any such information shall, as appropriate, be collected with their explicit consent of the victims, based on their self-identification and in accordance with provisions on human rights and fundamental freedoms, such as data protection regulations and privacy guarantees. This information must not be misused.
(b) The statistical data and information should be collected with the objective of monitoring the situation of marginalised groups as well as the development and evaluation of legislation, policies, practices and other measures aimed at preventing and combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, as well as for the purpose of determining whether any measures have an unintentional disparate impact on victims. To that end, it recommends the development of voluntary, consensual and participatory strategies in the process of collecting, designing and using information.
(c) The information should take into account economic and social indicators, including, where appropriate, health and health status, infant and maternal mortality, life expectancy, literacy, education, employment, housing, land ownership, mental and physical health care, water, sanitation, energy and communications services, poverty and average disposable income in order to elaborate social and economic development policies with a view to closing the existing gaps in social and economic conditions.
93. Invites States, inter-governmental organisations, non-governmental organisations, academic institutions and the private sector to improve concepts and methods of data collection and analysis; to promote research, exchange experiences and successful practices and develop promotional activities in this area; and to develop indicators of progress and participation of individuals and groups in society subject to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
94. Recognizes that policies and programmes aimed at combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance should be based on quantitative and qualitative research, incorporating a gender perspective. Such policies and programmes should take into account priorities identified by individuals and groups who are victims of, or subject to, racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
95. Urges States to establish regular monitoring on acts of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in the public and private sector, including those committed by law enforcement officials;
96. Invites States to promote and conduct studies and adopt an integral objective and long-term approach to all phases and aspects of migration which will deal effectively with both its causes and manifestations. These studies and approaches should pay special attention to the root causes of migratory flows, such as lack of full enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms, the effects of economic globalization on migration trends;
97. Recommends that further studies be conducted on how racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance may be reflected in laws, policies, institutions and practices and how this may have contributed to the victimization and exclusion of migrants, especially women and children;
98. Recommends that States include where applicable in their periodic reports to United Nations human rights treaty bodies, in an appropriate form, statistical information relating to individuals, members of groups and communities within their jurisdiction, including statistical data about participation in political life and about their economic, social and cultural situation. All such information shall be collected in accordance with provisions on human rights and fundamental freedoms, such as data protection regulations and privacy guarantees;
99. Recognizes
that combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance
is a primary responsibility of States.
It therefore encourages States to develop or elaborate national action
plans to promote diversity, equality, equity, social justice, equality of
opportunity and the participation of all.
Through, among other things, affirmative or positive actions and
strategies, these plans should aim at creating conditions for all to
participate effectively in decision‑making and realize civil, cultural,
economic, political and social rights in all spheres of life on the basis of
non‑discrimination. The
World Conference encourages States, in developing and elaborating such action
plans, to establish, or reinforce, dialogue with non‑governmental
organizations in order to involve them more closely in designing, implementing
and evaluating policies and programmes;
100. Urges States to establish, on the
basis of statistical information, national programmes, including affirmative or
positive measures, to promote the access of groups of individuals who are or
may be victims of racial discrimination to basic social services, including
primary education, basic health care and adequate housing;
101. Urges States
to establish programmes to promote the access without discrimination to groups
or individuals who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance, to health care and to promote strong efforts to eliminate,
disparities, inter alia, in the infant and maternal mortality rates,
childhood immunizations, HIV/AIDS, heart diseases, cancer and contagious
diseases;
102. Urges States to promote residential
integration of all members of the society at the planning stage of urban
development schemes and other human settlements, as well as, while renewing
neglected areas of public housing so as to counter social exclusion and
marginalisation.
103. Urges
States to promote and support where appropriate the organization and operation
of enterprises owned by persons who are victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance by promoting equal access to
credits and training programmes;
104. Urges
States and encourages non‑governmental organizations and the private
sector:
(a) To support the creation of workplaces free of discrimination through a multifaceted strategy that includes civil rights enforcement, public education and communication within the workplace, and to promote and protect the rights of workers who are subject to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
(b) To foster the creation, growth and expansion of businesses dedicated to improving economic and educational conditions in underserved and disadvantaged areas, by increasing access to capital through, inter alia, community development banks, recognizing that new businesses can have a positive, dynamic impact on communities in need, and to work with the private sector to create jobs, help retain existing jobs and stimulate industrial and commercial growth in economically distressed areas;
(c) to improve the prospects of targeted groups facing, inter alia, the greatest obstacles in finding, keeping or regaining work, including skilled employment. Particular attention should be paid to persons subject to multiple discrimination;
105. Urges States to give special
attention, when devising and implementing legislation and policies designed to
enhance the protection of workers’ rights, to the serious situation of
the lack of protection, and in some cases, exploitation, as in the case of
trafficked persons and smuggled migrants which makes them more vulnerable to
ill-treatment such as confinement in the case of domestic workers and also
being employed in dangerous and poorly paid jobs.
106. Urges States to avoid the negative effects of discriminatory practices, racism and xenophobia in employment and occupation by promoting the application and observance of international instruments and norms on workers’ rights.
107. Encourages States to consider taking measures to increase the recruitment, retention and promotion of women and men belonging to groups which are currently under-represented in the teaching profession as a result of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and guarantee them effective equality of access to the profession it. Particular efforts should be made to recruit women and men who have the ability to interact effectively with all groups;
108. Calls upon States and encourages representatives of trade
unions and the business sector to advance non-discriminatory practices at the
work place and protect the rights of workers including in particular, the
victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
109. Calls upon States to provide effective access to
administrative and legal procedures and other remedial action to victims of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance at the work place.
110. Urges
States, individually and through international cooperation, to enhance measures
to fulfil the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable
standard of physical and mental health, with a view to eliminating disparities
in health status, as indicated in standard health indexes, which might result
from racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
111. Urges
States and encourages non‑governmental organizations and the private
sector:
(a) To provide effective mechanisms for monitoring and eliminating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in the health‑care system, such as the development and enforcement of effective anti‑discrimination laws;
(b) To take steps to ensure equal access to comprehensive, quality health care affordable for all, including primary health care for medically underserved people, facilitate the training of a health workforce that is both diverse and motivated to work in underserved communities, and work to increase diversity in the health‑care profession by recruiting women and men from all groups on merit and potential, representing the diversity of their societies, for health‑care careers and by retaining them in the health professions;
(c)To work with health‑care
professionals, community‑based health providers, non‑governmental
organizations, scientific researchers and private industry as a means of
improving the health status of marginalized communities, in particular victims
of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
(d)To work with health professionals,
scientific researchers and international and regional health organizations to study
the differential impacts of medical treatments and health strategies on various
communities;
(e)To adopt and implement policies and
programmes to improve HIV/AIDS prevention efforts in high‑risk
communities and work to expand availability of HIV/AIDS care, treatment and
other support services;
112. Invites
States to consider non-discriminatory measures to provide a safe and healthy
environment for individuals and members of groups victims of or subject to
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in
particular:
a) to
improve access to public information on health and environment issues;
b) to
ensure that relevant concerns are taken into account in the public process of
decision-making on the environment;
c) to
share technology and successful practices to improve human health and
environment in all areas;
d) to
take appropriate remedial measures, as possible to clean, re-use and redevelop
contaminated sites and where appropriate, relocate those affected on a
voluntary basis after consultations;
113. Urges
States and encourages the private sector and international financial and
development institutions, such as the World Bank and regional development
banks, to promote participation of persons who are victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in economic, cultural and
social decision‑making at all stages, particularly in the development and
implementation of poverty alleviation strategies, development projects, and
trade and market assistance programmes;
114. Urges States to promote, as appropriate, effective and equal access of all members of the community, especially those who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, to the decision making process in society at all levels and in particular at the local level, and also urges States and encourages the private sector to facilitate their effective participation in the economic life;
115. Urges all multilateral financial and development institutions in particular the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, World Trade Organisation and regional development banks to promote, in accordance with their regular budgets and the procedures of their governing bodies, participation by all members of the international community in decision making processes at all stages and levels in order to facilitate development projects and, as appropriate, trade and market access programmes.
Role of politicians and political parties
116. Underlines the key role that politicians and political parties can play in combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and encourages political parties to take concrete steps to promote equality, solidarity and non-discrimination in society, inter alia, by developing voluntary codes of conduct, which include internal disciplinary measures for violations thereof, so their members refrain from public statements and actions that encourage or incite racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
117. Invites the
Inter-Parliamentary Union to encourage debate in, and action by, Parliaments on
various measures including laws and policies to combat racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
118. Urges
States, where appropriate working with other relevant bodies, to commit
financial resources to anti‑racism education and to media campaigns
promoting the values of acceptance, tolerance, diversity and respect for the
cultures of all indigenous peoples living within their national borders. In particular, States should promote an
accurate understanding of the histories and cultures of indigenous peoples;
119. Urges the United Nations, other appropriate international and regional organizations and States to redress the marginalization of Africa’s contribution to world history and civilization by developing and implementing a specific and comprehensive programme of research, education and mass communication to disseminate widely a balanced and objective presentation of Africa’s seminal and valuable contribution to humanity;
120. Invites States and relevant international organizations and non-governmental organizations to build upon the efforts of UNESCO's Slave Route Project and its theme of “Breaking the Silence” by developing texts and testimony slavery multi-media centres and/or programmes that will collect, record, organize, exhibit and publish the existing data relevant to the history of slavery and the trans-Atlantic, Mediterranean and Indian Ocean slave trades, paying particular attention to the thoughts and actions of the victims of slavery and the slave trade, in their quest for freedom and justice.
121. Salutes the efforts
of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization made
within the framework of the Slave Route Project, and request that the outcome
be made available for the international community as soon as possible;
Access to education without discrimination
122. Urges States to commit themselves to
ensuring access to education, including access to free primary education for
all children, both girls and boys and access for adults to lifelong learning
and education, based on respect for human rights, diversity and tolerance,
without discrimination of any kind;
123. Urges States to ensure equal access
to education for all in law and in practice and to refrain from any legal or
any other measures leading to imposed racial segregation in any form in access
to schooling;
124. Urges States to:
(a)
adopt and implement laws that prohibit
discrimination on the basis of race, colour, descent or national or ethnic
origin at all levels of education, both formal and non-formal;
(b)
take all appropriate measures to eliminate
obstacles limiting the access of children to education;
(c)
ensure
that all children have access without discrimination to education of
good quality;
(d)
establish and implement standardised methods to
measure and track the educational
performance of disadvantaged children and young people;
(e)
to commit resources to eliminate where they
exist, inequalities in educational
outcomes for children and young people;
(f)
support efforts to ensure safe school
environments free from violence and harassment motivated by racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia or related intolerance ; and
(g)
consider establishing financial assistance
programmes designed to enable all students, regardless of race, colour, descent
or ethnic or national origin to attend institutions of higher education;
125. Urges States to adopt and implement laws that
prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, colour, descent or national or
ethnic origin at all levels of education; remove barriers and ensure equal
access to quality education that maximizes opportunities for employment in
today’s job markets; establish and implement methods to measure and track
improvement in disadvantaged youths’ education performance; support
efforts to ensure safe school environments free from violence and free of
harassment on the basis of race, colour, descent or national or ethnic origin;
and establish financial assistance programmes designed to enable students,
regardless of race, colour, descent or ethnic or national origin, to attend
institutions of higher education;
126. Requests States to include the struggle against racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance among the
activities undertaken within the framework of the United Nations
Decade for Human Rights Education and to take into account the recommendations
of the mid‑term evaluation report of the Decade;
127. Encourages all States, in cooperation with the United Nations, UNESCO and other relevant international organizations, to initiate and develop cultural and educational programmes aimed at countering racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in order to ensure respect for the dignity and worth of all human beings and enhance mutual understanding amongst all cultures and civilizations. It further urges States to support and implement public information campaigns and specific training programmes in the field of human rights, where appropriate formulated in local languages, to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and promote respect for the values of diversity, pluralism, tolerance, mutual respect, cultural sensitivity, integration and inclusiveness, Such programmes and campaigns should be addressed to all sectors of society, in particular children and young people;
128. Urges States to intensify their efforts in the field of education, including human rights education, in order to promote an understanding and awareness of the causes, consequences and evils of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and also urges States and encourages educational authorities and the private sector, as appropriate, to develop educational materials, in consultation with educational authorities and the private sector, as appropriate, including textbooks and dictionaries, aimed at combating those phenomena, and, in this context, calls upon States to give importance if appropriate, to textbook and curriculum review and amendment so as to eliminate any elements that might promote racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance or reinforce negative stereotypes, and to include material that refutes such stereotypes;
129. Urges the United Nations, other appropriate international and regional organizations and States to redress the marginalization of Africa’s contribution to world history and civilization by developing and implementing a specific and comprehensive programme of research, education and mass communication to disseminate widely a balanced and objective presentation of Africa’s seminal and valuable contribution to humanity;
130. Urges States, where appropriate working with other relevant bodies, to commit financial resources to anti‑racism education and to media campaigns promoting the values of acceptance, tolerance, diversity and respect for the cultures of all indigenous peoples living within their borders. In particular, States should promote an accurate understanding of the histories and cultures of indigenous peoples;
131. Urges States, if appropriate in cooperation with relevant organization including youth organizations, to support and implement public formal and non‑formal education, programmes designed to promote respect for cultural diversity;
132. Urges States to introduce and, as
applicable, to reinforce anti‑discrimination and anti‑racism
components in human rights programmes in school curricula, to develop and
improve relevant educational material, including history and other textbooks
and to ensure that all teachers are effectively trained and adequately
motivated to shape attitudes and behavioural patterns, based on the principles
of non‑discrimination, mutual respect and tolerance;
133. Calls upon States to undertake and facilitate activities aimed at educating young people in human rights and democratic citizenship and instilling values of solidarity, respect and appreciation of diversity, including respect for different groups. A special effort to inform and sensitize young people to respect democratic values and human rights should be undertaken or developed to fight against ideologies based on the fallacious theory of racial superiority;
134. Urges States to encourage all schools to consider developing educational activities, including extra‑curricular ones to raise awareness against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, inter alia, by commemorating the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (21 March);
135. Recommends to States to introduce, or reinforce, human rights education, with a view to combating prejudices which lead to racial discrimination and to promoting understanding , tolerance and friendship between different racial or ethnic groups in schools and in institutions of higher education curricula and to support public formal and non-formal education programmes designed to promote respect for cultural diversity and self-esteem of victims;
136. Urges States to develop and strengthen anti‑racist and gender‑sensitive human rights training for public officials including personnel in the administration of justice, particularly in law enforcement, correctional and security services as well as among health‑care, schools and migration authorities;
137. Urges States to pay specific attention to the negative impact of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance on the administration of justice and fair trial and to conduct nationwide campaigns, amongst other measures, to raise awareness among State organs and public officials concerning their obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and other relevant instruments;
138. Requests States, wherever appropriate through cooperation with international organizations, national institutions, non‑governmental organizations and the private sector, to organize and facilitate training activities, including courses or seminars about international norms prohibiting racial discrimination and their applicability in domestic law, as well as on their international human rights obligations, for prosecutors, members of the judiciary and other public officials;
139. Calls upon States to ensure that education and training, especially teacher training, promote respect for human rights and the fight against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and that educational institutions implement policies and programmes agreed by the relevant authorities on equal opportunities, anti‑racism, gender equality, cultural, religious and other diversity, with the participation of teachers, parents and students, and follow‑up their implementation. It further urges all educators, including teachers at all levels of education, religious communities and the print and electronic media to play an effective role in human rights education including as a means to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
140. Encourages States to consider taking measures to increase the recruitment, retention and promotion of women and men who are victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in the teaching profession and guarantee them effective equality of access to it. Particular efforts should be made to recruit women and men who have the ability to interact effectively with all groups;
141. Urges States to strengthen the human rights training and awareness‑raising activities designed for immigration officials, border police and staff of detention centres and prisons, local authorities and other civil servants in charge of enforcing laws, as well as teachers, with particular attention to the human rights of migrants, refugees and asylum seekers, in order to prevent acts of racial discrimination and xenophobia avoid situations where prejudices lead to decisions based on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia or related intolerance;
142. Urges States to provide or strengthen training for law enforcement, immigration and other relevant officials in the prevention of trafficking in persons. The training should focus on methods used in preventing such trafficking, prosecuting the traffickers and protecting the rights of victims, including protecting the victims from the traffickers. The training should also take into account the need to consider human rights and child- and gender- sensitive issues and it should encourage cooperation with non-governmental organizations, other relevant organizations and other elements of civil society;
4.
Information, communication and the
media, including new technologies
143. Welcomes
the positive contribution made by the new information and communications
technologies, including the Internet, in combating racism through rapid and
wide‑reaching communication.
144. Draws
attention to the potential to increase the use of the new information and
communications technologies, including the Internet, to create educational and
awareness‑raising networks against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance, both in and out of school, as well as the ability of
the Internet to promote universal respect for human rights and also respect for
the value of cultural diversity;
145. Emphasises
the importance of recognizing the value of cultural diversity and putting in
place concrete measures to encourage the access of the marginalized communities
to the mainstream and alternative media through, inter alia, the
presentation of programmes that reflect their cultures and languages;
146. Expresses
concern at the material progression of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance including its contemporary forms and
manifestations, such as the use of the new information and communications
technologies, including the Internet, to disseminate ideas of racial
superiority;
147. Urges
States and encourages the private sector to promote the development by the
media, including the print and electronic media, including Internet and
advertising, taking into account their independence, through their relevant
associations and organizations at the national, regional and international
levels, of a voluntary ethical code of conduct and self‑regulatory
measures, of policies and practices aimed at:
(a) Combating racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
(b) Promoting the fair, balanced and equitable
representation of the diversity of their societies, as well as ensuring that
this diversity is reflected among their staff;
(c) Combating the proliferation of ideas of
racial superiority, justification of racial hatred and discrimination in any
form;
(d) Promoting respect, tolerance and understanding among all individuals, peoples, nations and civilizations, for example through assistance in public awareness‑raising campaigns;
(e)
Avoiding stereotyping in all its
forms, and particularly the promotion of false images of migrants, including
migrant workers, and refugees in order to prevent the spread of xenophobic
sentiments among the public and to encourage the objective and balanced
portrayal of people, events and history;
148. Urges States to implement legal
sanctions, in accordance with relevant international human rights law, in
respect of incitement to racial hatred through new information and
communications technologies, including the Internet, and further urges them to
apply all relevant human rights instruments to which they are Parties,
in particular the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Racial Discrimination, to racism on the Internet;
149. Urges States to encourage the media
to avoid stereotyping based on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance;
150. Calls
upon States to consider the following, taking fully into account existing
international and regional standards on freedom of expression, while taking all
necessary measures to guarantee the right to freedom of opinion and expression:
a.) to
encourage Internet service providers to establish and disseminate specific
voluntary codes of conduct and self‑regulatory measures against the
dissemination of racist messages and those that result in racial
discrimination, xenophobia or any form of intolerance and discrimination; to
that end, Internet providers are encouraged to set up mediating bodies at
national and international levels, involving relevant civil society
institutions;
b.) to
adopt and apply, to the extent possible, appropriate legislation for
prosecuting those responsible for incitement to racial hatred or violence on
the new information and communications technologies, including the Internet:
c.)
to
address the problem of dissemination of racist material through the new
information and communications technologies, including the Internet, inter
alia by imparting training to law enforcement authorities;
d.)
to
denounce and actively discourage the transmission of racist and xenophobic
messages through all communications media, including new information and
communications technologies, such as the Internet;
e.)
to
consider a prompt and co-ordinated international response to the rapidly
evolving phenomenon of the dissemination of hate speech and racist material on
new information and communications technologies, including the Internet; and in this context to strengthen international
cooperation;
f.)
to
encourage access and use by all people of the Internet as an international and
equal forum, aware that there are disparities in use of and access to the
Internet;
g.)
to
examine ways in which the positive contribution made by the new information and
communications technologies, such as the Internet, can be enhanced through
replication of good practices in combating racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
h.)
to
encourage the reflection of the diversity of societies among the personnel of
media organisations and the new information and communications technologies,
such as the Internet, by promoting adequate representation of different
segments within societies at all levels of their organisational structure;
B. International level
151. Urges
all actors on the international scene to build an international order based on
inclusion, justice, equality and equity, human dignity, mutual understanding
and promotion of and respect for cultural diversity and universal human rights,
and to reject all doctrines of exclusion based on racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
152. Believes that all conflicts and disputes should be resolved through peaceful means and political dialogue. We call on all parties involved in such conflicts to exercise restraint and to respect human rights and international humanitarian law;
153. Calls upon States, in opposing all forms of racism, to recognize the need to counter anti-Semitism, anti-Arabism and Islamophobia world-wide and urges all States to take effective measures to prevent the emergence of movements based on racism and discriminator ideas concerning these communities.
154. As for the situation in the Middle East, calls for the end of violence and the swift resumption of negotiations, respect for international human rights and humanitarian law, respect for the principle of self-determination and the end of all suffering, thus allowing Israel and the Palestinians to resume the peace process, and to develop and prosper in security and freedom.
155. Encourages
States, regional and international organizations, including financial
institutions, as well as civil society, to address within existing mechanisms
or where necessary to put in place and/or develop mechanisms to address those
aspects of globalization which may lead to racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance;
156. Recommends
that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations of the Secretariat and other
concerned United Nations agencies, bodies and programmes strengthen their
coordination to discern patterns of serious violations of human rights and
humanitarian law with a view to assessing the risk of further deterioration
that could lead to genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity;
157. Encourages
the World Health Organisation and other relevant international organisations to
promote and develop activities for the recognition of the impact of racism,
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance as significant social
determinants of physical and mental health status, including the HIV¤ AIDS pandemic, and access to health care, and
to prepare specific projects, including research, to ensure equitable health
systems for the victims.
158. Encourages
the International Labour Organisation to carry out activities and programmes to
combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in the
world of work, and support actions of States, employer¢s organisations and trade unions in this field.
159. Urges
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization to
provide support to States in the preparation of teaching materials and tools
for promoting teaching, training and educational activities relating to human
rights and the struggle against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance;
160. Recognizes the
efforts of developing countries, in particular, the commitment and the determination
of the African leaders to seriously address the challenges of poverty,
underdevelopment, marginalization, social exclusion, economic disparities,
instability and insecurity, through initiative such as the New African
Initiative and other innovative mechanisms such as the World Solidarity Fund
for the Eradication of Poverty, and calls upon developing countries, the United
Nations and its Specialized Agencies as well as international financial
institutions to provide, through their operational programmes, new and
additional financial resources as appropriate to support these initiatives;
161. Recognizes that
these historical injustices have undeniably contributed to poverty,
underdevelopment, marginalization, social exclusion, economic disparities, instability
and insecurity that affects many people in different parts of the world, in
particular in developing countries. The Conference recognizes the need to
develop programmes for the social and economic development of these societies
and the Diaspora within the framework of a new partnership based on the spirit
of solidarity and mutual respect in the following areas:
· Debt relief
· Poverty
eradication
· Building or
strengthening democratic institutions
· Promotion of
foreign direct investment
· Market access
· Intensify
efforts to meet the internationally agreed targets for Official Development
Assistance (ODA) transfers to developing countries
· New
Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) bridging the digital divide
· Agriculture
and food security
· Transfer of
technology
· Transparent
and accountable governance
· Investment in
health infrastructure in tackling HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria, including among
others through the Global AIDS and Health Fund
· Infrastructure
development
· Human
resource development including capacity building
· Education,
training and cultural development
· Mutual legal
assistance in the repatriation of illegally obtained and illegally transferred
(stashed) funds in accordance with national and international instruments
· Illicit
traffic in small arms and light weapons
· Restitution
of art objects, historical artefacts and documents to their countries of origin
in accordance with bilateral agreements or international instruments
· Trafficking
in persons, particularly, women and children
· Facilitation
of welcomed return and resettlement of the descendants of enslaved Africans
162. Urges
international financial and development institutions and the operational
programmes and specialized agencies of the United Nations to give greater
priority to, and allocate appropriate funding for programmes addressing the
development challenges of the affected states and societies, in particular
those on the African Continent and in the Diaspora;
163. Urges
States to take all necessary measures to address, as a matter of urgency, the
pressing requirement for justice for the victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and to ensure that victims
have full access to information, support, effective protection and national,
administrative and judicial remedies, including the right to seek just and
adequate reparation or satisfaction for damage, as well as legal assistance,
where required;
164. Urges States to facilitate to victims of racial discrimination, including victims of torture and ill-treatment, access to all appropriate legal procedures and free legal assistance in a manner adapted to their specific needs and vulnerability, including through legal representation;
165. Urges States to ensure the protection against victimization of complainants and witnesses to acts of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and to consider measures such as, where appropriate, making legal assistance, including legal aid, available to complainants when seeking a legal remedy and, if possible, affording the possibility for non‑governmental organizations to support complainants of racism, with their consent, in legal procedures;
National legislation and
programmes
166. For the
purposes of effectively combating racism and racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance in the civil, political, economic, social and cultural
fields, the World Conference recommends to all Member States that their
national legislative framework should expressly and specifically prohibit
racial discrimination and provide effective judicial and other remedies or
redress, including through the designation of national, independent,
specialized bodies.
167. Urges States, with regard to the procedural remedies provided for in their domestic law, to bear in mind the following considerations:
(a) Access to such remedies should be widely available, on a non-discriminatory and equal basis;
(b) Existing procedural remedies should be made known in the context of the relevant action, and victims of racial discrimination should be helped to avail themselves of them in accordance with the particular case;
(c) Inquiries into complaints of racial discrimination, and the adjudication of such complaints must be carried out as rapidly as possible;
(d) Persons who are victims of racial discrimination should be accorded legal assistance and aid in the complaint proceedings, where applicable free of charge and, where necessary, should be provided with the help of competent interpreters in such complaint proceedings or in any civil or criminal cases arising therefrom or connected thereto;
(e) The creation of competent national bodies to effectively investigate allegations of racial discrimination and to give protection to complainants against intimidation or harassment is a desirable development and should be undertaken; Steps should be taken towards the enactment of legislation to prohibit discriminatory practices on grounds of race, colour, descent, national or ethnic origin, and to provide for the application of appropriate penalties against offenders and remedies, including adequate compensation of the victims;
(f) Access to legal remedies should be facilitated for victims of discrimination and, in this regard, the innovation of conferring a capacity on national and other institutions, as well as relevant non-governmental organizations to assist such victims should be seriously considered, and programmes should be developed to enable the most vulnerable groups to have access to the legal system;
(g) New and innovative methods and procedures of conflict resolution, mediation and conciliation between parties involved in conflicts or disputes based on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance should be explored and, where possible, established;
(h) The development of restorative justice policies and programmes for the benefit of victims of relevant forms of discrimination is desirable and should be seriously considered;
(i) States which have acceded to article 14 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination should make increased efforts to inform their public of the existence of the complaints mechanism under article 14;
Remedies, reparations, compensation
168. Urges
States to reinforce protection against racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance by ensuring that all persons have access to
effective and adequate remedies and enjoy the right to seek from competent
national tribunals and other national institutions just and adequate reparation
and satisfaction for any damage as a result of such discrimination. It further underlines the importance of
access to the law and to the courts for complainants of racism and racial
discrimination and draws attention to the need for judicial and other remedies
to be made widely known, easily accessible, expeditious and not unduly
complicated;
169. Urges
States to adopt the necessary measures, as provided by national law, to ensure
the right of victims to seek just and adequate reparation and satisfaction to
address acts of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, and to design effective measures to prevent the repetition of such
acts;
170. Calls
upon States to apply diligently all commitments undertaken by them in the
declarations and plans of action of the regional conferences in which they
participated, and to formulate national policies and action plans to combat
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in compliance
with the objectives set forth therein, and as provided for in other relevant
instruments and decisions; and further requests that, in cases where such
national policies and action plans to combat racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance already exist, States incorporate in them
the commitments arising from their regional conferences;
171. Urges
States that have not yet done so to consider acceding to the Geneva Conventions
of 12 August 1949 and their two Additional Protocols of 1977, as well as
to other treaties of international humanitarian law, and to enact, with the
highest priority, appropriate legislation, taking the measures required to give
full effect to their obligations under international humanitarian law, in
particular in relation to the rules prohibiting discrimination;
172. Urges
States to develop cooperation programmes to promote equal opportunities for the
benefit of victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance and encourages them to propose the creation of multilateral cooperation
programmes with the same objective;
173. Invites
States to include the subject of the struggle against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in the work programmes of
the regional integration agencies and of the regional cross‑boundary
dialogue forums;
174. Urges States to recognize the challenges that people of different socially constructed races, colours, descent, national or ethnic origins, religions and languages experience in seeking to live together and to develop harmonious multi-racial and multi-cultural societies; also urges States to recognize that the positive examples of relatively successful multi-racial and multi-cultural societies, such as some of those in the Caribbean region, need to be examined and analysed, and that techniques, mechanisms, policies and programmes for reconciling conflicts based on factors related to race, colour, descent, language, religion, national or ethnic origin, and for developing harmonious multi-racial and multi cultural societies need to be systematically considered and developed, and therefore requests the United Nations and its relevant specialized agencies to consider establishing an international centre for multi-racial and multi-cultural studies and policy development to undertaken this critical work for the benefit of the international community;
175. Urges States to protect the national or ethnic, cultural, religious and linguistic identity of minorities within their respective territories and to develop appropriate legislative and other measures to encourage conditions for the promotion of that identity, in order to protect them from any form of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. In this context, forms of multiple discrimination should be fully taken into account.
176. Further urges States to equally
ensure the protection and promotion of the identities of the historically
disadvantaged communities in those unique circumstances where this may be
appropriate;
177. Urges
States to take or strengthen measures, including through bilateral or
multilateral cooperation, to address root causes, such as poverty,
underdevelopment and lack of equal opportunity, some of which may be associated
with discriminatory practices, that make persons, especially women and
children, vulnerable to trafficking, which may give rise to racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
178. Encourages States, in cooperation
with non‑governmental organizations, to undertake campaigns aimed at clarifying
opportunities, limitations and rights in the event of migration so as to enable
everyone, in particular women to make informed decisions and to prevent them
from becoming victims of trafficking;
179. Urges States to adopt and implement
social development policies based on reliable statistical data and centred on
the attainment, by the year 2015, of the commitments to meet the basic needs of
all set forth in paragraph 36 of the Programme of Action of the World Summit
for Social Development, held at Copenhagen in 1995, with a view to
significantly close the existing gaps in living conditions faced by victims of
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, especially
regarding the illiteracy rate, universal primary education, infant mortality,
under‑five child mortality, health, reproductive health care to all, and
access to safe drinking water.
Promotion of gender equality will also be taken into account in the
adoption and implementation of these policies.
180. Urges
States to continue cooperating with the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination and other human rights treaty monitoring bodies in order to
promote, including by means of a constructive and transparent dialogue, the
effective implementation of these instruments and proper consideration of the
recommendations adopted by these bodies concerning complaints of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
181. Requests
adequate resources for the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination in order to enable the full discharge of its mandate and
stresses the importance of providing adequate resources for all United Nations
human rights treaty bodies.
182. Endorses efforts of the international community, in particular steps taken under the auspices of UNESCO to promote respect for and preserve cultural diversity within and between communities and nations with a view to creating a harmonious multicultural world, including elaboration of a possible international instrument in this respect in a manner consistent with international human rights instruments;
183. Invites the United Nations General Assembly to consider elaborating an integral and comprehensive International Convention to protect and promote the rights and dignity of disabled people, including especially provisions that address the discriminatory practices and treatment affecting them.
184. Invites
the Inter‑Parliamentary Union to contribute to the activities of the
International Year of Mobilization against Racism, Racial Discrimination,
Xenophobia and Related Intolerance by encouraging national Parliaments to
review progress on the objectives of the World Conference;
185. Encourages
States to participate in regional dialogues on problems of migration and
invites them to consider negotiating bilateral and regional agreements on
migrant workers and designing and implementing programmes with States of other
regions to protect the rights of migrants;
186. Urges
States, in consultation with civil society, to support or otherwise establish,
as appropriate, regional, comprehensive dialogues on the causes and
consequences of migration that focus not only on law enforcement and border
control, but also on the promotion and protection of the human rights of
migrants and on the relationship between migration and development;
187. Encourages
international organizations having mandates dealing specifically with migration
issues to exchange information and coordinate their activities on matters
involving racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance
against migrants, including migrant workers, with the support of the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights;
188. Expresses
its deep concern over the severity of humanitarian sufferings of affected
civilian populations and the burden carried by many receiving countries,
particularly developing countries and countries in transition, and requests the relevant international
institutions to ensure that urgent adequate financial and humanitarian
assistance is maintained for the host countries to enable them to help the
victims, to address on an equitable basis, difficulties of populations expelled
from their homes and calls for sufficient safeguards to enable refugees to
exercise freely their right of return to their countries of origin voluntarily,
in safety and dignity;
189. Encourages
States to conclude bilateral, subregional, regional and international
agreements to address the problem of trafficking in women and children, in
particular girls, as
well as the smuggling of migrants;
190. Calls
upon States, to promote, as appropriate, exchanges at the regional and
international levels among independent national institutions and as applicable
other relevant independent bodies with a view to enhance cooperation to combat
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
191. Urges
States to support the activities of regional bodies/centres which combat
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance where they
exist in their region, and recommends the establishment of such bodies where
they do not exist/be considered in all regions. These bodies/centres may undertake
the following activities, amongst others:
assess and follow-up the situation of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance and of individuals or groups which are
victims thereof or subject to identify trends and issues/problems; collect,
disseminate and exchange information/inter alia relevant to the outcome
of regional conferences and the World Conference and build networks to these
ends; highlight examples of good practice; organize awareness raising
campaigns; develop proposals/solutions/preventive measures, where possible and
appropriate, through joint efforts by coordinating with the United Nations,
regional organizations and Member States and national human rights
institutions;
192. Urges
international organizations, within their mandates, to contribute to the fight
against racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
193. Encourages
financial and development institutions and the operational programmes and
specialised agencies of the United Nations, in accordance with their regular
budgets and the procedures of their governing bodies, to:
a)
Assign
particular priority and allocate sufficient funding, within their areas of
competence and budgets, to improve the situation of victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in order to combat
manifestations of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance and to include them in the development and implementation of
projects concerning them,
b) Integrate
human rights principles and standards into their policies and programmes,
c) Consider
including in their regular reporting to their boards of governors information
on their contribution to promote the participation of victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance within their programmes and
activities, and information on the efforts taken to facilitate their
participation and to ensure that these policies and practices contribute to the
eradication of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance,
d) Examine how
their policies and practices affect victims of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance and ensure that these policies and practices
contribute to the eradication of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance.
194.
a) Calls upon
States to elaborate in consultation with national human rights institutions,
other institutions created by law to combat racism, and civil society and to
provide the High Commissioner for Human Rights with action plans and other
relevant materials on the measures undertaken in order to implement provisions
of the Declaration and the Programme of Action.
b) In follow-up
to the World Conference, the High Commissioner for Human Rights is requested to
cooperate with five independent eminent experts, one from each region,
appointed by the Secretary-General from among candidates proposed by the
Chairman of the Commission on Human Rights, after consultation with the
regional groups, to follow the implementation of the provisions of the
Declaration and Programme of Action.
An annual progress report on the implementation of these provisions will
be presented by the High Commissioner to the Commission on Human Rights and the
General Assembly, taking into account information and views provided by States,
relevant human rights treaty bodies, special procedures and other mechanisms of
the Commission on Human Rights of the United Nations, international, regional
and non-governmental organizations and national human rights institutions;
c) Welcomes the
intention of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to
establish, within the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, an
anti-discrimination unit to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance and to promote equality and non-discrimination, and invites
her to consider the inclusion into its mandate, inter alia, the compilation of
information on racial
discrimination and its development, on legal and administrative support and
advice to victims of racial discrimination and the collection of background
materials provided by States, international, regional and non-governmental
organizations and national human rights institutions under the follow-up
mechanism of the World Conference;
d) Recommends
that the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in co-operation with
States, international, regional and non-governmental organizations and national
human rights institutions creates a database containing information on practical
means to address racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, particularly international and regional instruments and national
legislation, including anti-discrimination legislation, as well as legal means
to combat racial discrimination; on remedies available through international
mechanisms to victims of racial discrimination as well as national remedies;
educational and preventive programmes implemented in various countries and
regions; best practices to address racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia
and related intolerance; opportunities for technical cooperation; and academic
studies and specialized documents, and assure that such a database is as
accessible as possible to those in authority and the public at large, through its
website and by other appropriate means;
195. Invites the United Nations and UNESCO to continue to organize high‑level and other meetings on the Dialogue among Civilizations and, with this purpose, to mobilize funds and promote partnerships;
196. Encourages the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to continue and expand the appointment and designation of goodwill ambassadors in all countries of the world in order to, inter alia, promote respect for human rights, a culture of tolerance and to increase the level of awareness about the scourge of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
197. Calls upon the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to continue its efforts to further increase awareness of the work of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and other United Nations human rights treaty bodies;
198. Invites the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, in consultation with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, and non‑governmental organizations active in the field of the promotion and protection of human rights, to undertake regular consultations with them and to encourage research activities aimed at collecting, maintaining and adapting the technical, scientific, educational and information materials produced by all cultures around the world to fight racism;
199. Requests the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to pay special attention to violations of the human rights of victims of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in particular migrants, including migrant workers, to promote international cooperation in combating xenophobia and, to this end, develop programmes which can be applied in countries on the basis of appropriate cooperation agreements;
200. Invites States to assist the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in developing and funding, upon the request of States, specific technical cooperation projects aimed at combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
201. The World Conference:
(a) Invites the
Commission on Human Rights to include into mandates of the Special Rapporteurs and working groups
of the Commission on Human Rights, in particular the Special Rapporteur on
contemporary forms of racism, recommendations to consider the relevant
provisions of the Declaration and the Programme of Action while exercising
their mandates, in particular, reporting to the General Assembly and the
Commission on Human Rights and also to consider any other appropriate means to
follow-up on the outcome on the World Conference.
(b) Calls upon States to
cooperate with the relevant special procedures of the Commission on Human
Rights and other mechanisms of the United Nations in matters pertaining to
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, in
particular with the special rapporteurs, independent experts and special
representatives;
202. Recommends that the Commission on
Human Rights prepare complementary international standards to strengthen and
update international instruments against racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance in all their aspects;
Decades
203. Urges States and the international community to support the activities of the Third Decade to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination;
204. Recommends that the General Assembly consider declaring a United Nations year or decade against trafficking in persons, especially in women, youth and children in order to protect their dignity and human rights;
205. Urges States, in close cooperation
with UNESCO, to promote the
implementation of the Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace
and the objectives of the International Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non‑Violence
for the Children of the World to started in 2001 and invites UNESCO to
contribute to these activities;
206. Recommends that the United Nations
Secretary‑ General conduct an evaluation of the results of the
International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People (1995‑2004)
and make recommendations concerning how to mark the end of this Decade,
including an appropriate follow‑up;
207. Requests States to ensure adequate
funding for the establishment of an operational framework and a firm basis for
the future development of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues within the
United Nations system;
208. Urges States to cooperate with the work of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people and requests the Secretary‑General and the High Commissioner for Human Rights to ensure that the Special Rapporteur is provided with all the necessary human, technical and financial resources to fulfil his/her responsibilities;
209. Calls upon States to conclude negotiations on and approve as soon as possible the text of the draft declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples, under discussion by the working group of the Commission on Human Rights to elaborate a draft declaration, in accordance with Commission resolution 1995/32;
210. Urges States, in the light of the relationship between racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and poverty, marginality and social exclusion of peoples and individuals at both the national and international levels, to enhance their policies and measures to reduce income and wealth inequalities and to take appropriate steps, individually and through international cooperation, to promote and protect economic, social and cultural rights on a non‑discriminatory basis;
211. Urges States and international financial and development institutions to mitigate any negative effects of globalization by examining inter alia how their policies and practices affect national populations in general and indigenous peoples in particular; by ensuring that their policies and practices contribute to the eradication of racism through the participation of national populations and, in particular, indigenous peoples in development projects; by further democratizing international financial institutions; and by consulting with indigenous peoples on any matter that may affect their physical, spiritual or cultural integrity;
212. Invites financial and development institutions and the operational programmes and specialized agencies of the United Nations, in accordance with their regular budgets and the procedures of their governing bodies:
(a) To assign
particular priority to and allocate sufficient funding, within their areas of
competence, to the improvement of the status of indigenous peoples, with
special attention to the needs of these populations in developing countries,
including the preparation of specific programmes with a view to achieving the objectives
of the International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People;
(b) To carry out
special projects, through appropriate channels and in collaboration with
indigenous peoples, to support their initiatives at the community level and to
facilitate the exchange of information and technical know‑how between
indigenous peoples and experts in these areas;
213. Calls upon States to strengthen cooperation, develop partnerships and consult regularly with non‑governmental organizations and all other sectors of the civil society to harness their experience and expertise thereby contributing to the development of legislation, policies and other governmental initiatives, as well as involving them more closely in the elaboration and implementation of policies and programmes designed to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
214. Urges leaders from religious communities to continue to confront racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance through, inter alia, promotion and sponsoring of dialogue and partnerships to bring about reconciliation and healing and harmony within and among societies, and invites the religious community to participate in promoting economic and social revitalization and encourages religious leaders to foster greater cooperation and contact between diverse racial groups;
215. Urges States to establish and strengthen effective partnerships with and provide support, as appropriate, to all relevant actors of civil society, including non‑governmental organizations working to promote gender equality and advancement of women, particularly women subject to multiple discrimination, to promote an integrated and holistic approach to the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women and girls;
216. Urges States to provide an open and conducive environment to enable non‑governmental organizations to function freely and openly within their societies and thereby make an effective contribution to the elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance throughout the world and promote a wider role for grass‑roots organizations;
217. Calls upon States to explore means to expand the role of non‑governmental organizations in society through, in particular, deepening the ties of solidarity amongst citizens, promoting greater trusts across racial and social class divides by promoting wider citizen involvement and more voluntary cooperation ;
218. Urges
States to take measures including, where appropriate, legislative measures, to
ensure that transnational corporations and other foreign enterprises operating
within their national territories conform to precepts and practices of
non-racism and non-discrimination, and further encourages the business sector,
including transnational corporations and foreign enterprises, to collaborate
with trade unions and other relevant sectors of civil society to develop
voluntary codes of conduct for all businesses, designed to prevent, address and
eradicate racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance;
Youth
219. Urges
States to encourage the full and active participation of, as well as involve
more closely, youth in the elaboration, planning and implementation of
activities to fight racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, and calls upon States, in partnership with non‑governmental
organizations and other sectors of society, to facilitate both national and
international youth dialogue on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance, through the World Youth Forum of the United Nations
system and through the use of new technologies, exchanges and other means;
220. Urges
States to encourage and facilitate the establishment and maintenance of youth
mechanisms, set up by youth organizations and young women and men themselves,
in the spirit of combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance, through such activities as, among others: disseminating
and exchanging information and building networks to these ends; organizing
awareness-raising campaigns and participating in multicultural education
programmes; developing proposals/solutions where possible and appropriate;
cooperating and consulting regularly with non-governmental organizations and
other actors in civil society in developing initiatives and programmes that
promote intercultural exchange and dialogue.
221. Urges
States, in co-operation with intergovernmental organisations, the International
Olympic Committee and International and Regional Sports Federations, to
intensify the fight against racism in sport by, among other things, educating
the youth of the world through sport practised without discrimination of any
kind and in the Olympic spirit, which requires human understanding , tolerance,
fair play and solidarity.
222. Recognizes
that the success of this Programme of Action will require political will and
adequate funding at the national, regional and international levels, and international
cooperation.
1 .For the purpose of this Declaration and Programme of Action, it was understood that the term “gender” refers to the two sexes, male and female, within the context of society. The term “gender” does not indicate any meaning different from the above.
2 . Reference should be made to paragraphs _________ of the Report of the Conference which lists all the reservations and statements on the Declaration and the Programme of Action.