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PEOPLE UNITED AGAINST RACISM
Civil Society Forum 2009 for the Durban Review Conference
17-19 April 2009, Geneva, Switzerland
Geneva 2009 Declaration Against Racism
FROM
THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE GENEVA CIVIL SOCIETY FORUM 2009
A Time to Speak Out
We participants of the Civil Society Forum for the Durban Review
Conference 2009 held in Geneva 17 to 19 April strongly welcome the
holding of the Durban Review Conference and reaffirm our full and
dedicated support for the Durban Declaration and Plan of Action (DDPA)
adopted by the 2001 World Conference Against Racism, Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance.
We
commit ourselves to renew our efforts and intensify our work for the
implementation of the 2001 landmark programme which constitute a
solid foundation in the struggle of humankind against racism and
racial discrimination.
We
express our deep concern over the decision by some powerful
countries to boycott this important conference which falls short of
their Charter obligations to combat racism and promote human rights
for all.
We
are appalled by the many obstacles that have been put in the way of
preparing and holding of the Durban Review Conference as a result of
lack of political will resulting in the erosion of support for the
Durban Declaration and Programme of Action among some member states
which also has been reflected in the lack of United Nations support
and encouragement for Civil Society preparations for the Review
Conference.
We
strongly believe and insist that the outcome of the 2001 Durban
Conference is and must be recognized on an equal level with the
outcomes of other major United Nations conferences, Summits and
Special sessions and that strong and concerted actions need to be
taken by the United Nations, Member States and Civil Society to
reinforce its standing and rightful place at the top of the agenda
of global priorities.
We
must not forget the historical importance of the Durban Declaration
and Programme of Action in declaring the transatlantic slave trade
as a crime against humanity. It also provided an understanding and
clear analyses of the emergence of the present day world and the
deep roots of racism in the transatlantic slave trade and colonial
era. Its remaining legacies are felt throughout the world in terms
of situations of profound social and economic inequality, hatred,
bigotry, racism and prejudice.
While
noting with appreciation all the measures taken since 2001 to combat
racism we are alarmed that today we are
witnessing an upsurge of racism in many countries as a result of
neglect to address root causes and institutionalised racism. This
has been further exacerbated by the deepening world economic crisis.
Racism is now taking an increasingly violent and aggravated forms in
many countries and regions.
We express our
concern at the increasing acts of xenophobia against migrants,
migrant workers and members of their family, especially by the
migration policies of many countries that lead to aggravated forms
of discrimination. Migrant workers and their families must be
granted residency and equal rights in the countries in which they
contribute through their work.
We are equally
concerned by the increasing discrimination, violation and
exploitation faced by refugees, asylum seekers, stateless persons,
internally displaced persons and trafficked persons, including women
and children, as this constitute an affront to human rights and
human dignity. We seek all the international community to put the
responsibility of all violations of their rights and all forms of
racism and discriminations against them on the host countries under
the international law.
We emphasise the
multiple and aggravated forms of discrimination experienced by women
globally, at work and at home, especially marginalized and displaced
women, which is exacerbated by racism, racial discrimination and
related intolerance and leads to the denial of their civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights and call for the
full respect and implementation of these rights urgently.
We call on states
to adopt strong and effective measures and support initiatives for
children and youth relating to work, culture and education so as to
eliminate social exclusion and better counter racism, intolerance
and conflicts.
We are alarmed by
the fact that counterterrorism measures after 9/11 have led to the
rise of increased racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, racial
intolerance and religious stereotyping as new and contemporary
manifestations of racism. We condemn the stereotyping of religious
minorities and call for this to be closely monitored and addressed
by the United Nations bodies. This includes incitement to hatred
based on religious believes, in particular the serious increase in
islamophobia. We call for the review of the Anti-terror legislation
and measures and actively bring them into accord with international
human rights standards.
We will continue
our work against all forms of racial and religious discrimination,
including afrophobia, anti-Arabism, anti-Ziganism, anti-Semitism,
islamophobia, anti-African and Indigenous Peoples ancestral
spiritual traditions
We acknowledge
that poverty affects the majority of people world-wide who suffer
from unequal distribution of wealth and reiterate that the present
global finance and trade system must be restructured and reformed in
the interest of justice and the equitable sharing of resources at
all levels. This is on behalf of the healing of a world still
divided by the exploitation of peoples’ resources and the past and
continuing legacies of slave trade and colonialism.
We reiterate that
the barbarism of the transatlantic slave trade stands out in the
history of humanity in terms of its magnitude and organised nature
and express our concern over any attempt to revise the verdict of
history of this unparalleled crime against humanity. We call for the
full implementation of the Durban agreements on the transatlantic
slave trade and the full integration of those provisions as well as
those of the recent General Assembly resolutions in the work of the
United Nations Durban follow up mechanisms. Such an active role for
the Durban follow up mechanisms should provide the ground for a
collaborative effort to bring the matters of remembrance,
identification of legacies, apologies, reparations, repatriation and
other forms of remedies forward.
We call on the
United Nations to create a Permanent Forum for Peoples of African
Descent and African diaspora in order to ensure their visibility in
the UN system.
We note the
continued failure of the international community to recognize the
destruction of many of the worlds indigenous peoples through the
impositions of the dominant culture in the countries they live. We
call on the international community to renew the attention to this
and to recognize the historical debt the world owes to indigenous
peoples worldwide.
We are appalled by
the ongoing atrocities, extreme forms of institutionalised
discrimination and racist colonialist practices committed against
the Palestinian People struggling against all odds to achieve their
inalienable right to self-determination according to international
law. We condemn the continued impunity of the perpetrators and those
responsible of these crimes against humanity and war crimes and call
for immediate measures to bring them to justice. Our solidarity with
the Palestinian People will remain firm and alive until the full
achievement of all their rights, including the right to return,
under international law enshrined in the resolutions of the United
Nations.
We strongly
deplore the silence in the official Durban process and documents
regarding discrimination based on work and descent, including caste
based discrimination, which affect some 260 million people globally,
especially women, violating their individual and collective rights
and dignity for generations. We call on the United Nations and
international community to support their cause for equality and
justice.
We express our
strong concern about crimes against humanity and war crimes in
Darfur with massive violations of human rights of civilian
populations, the continuing multiple, racial and discriminatory acts
and mass rapes of women. We urge the international community to
implement the relevant United Nations resolutions.
We affirm our
solidarity with all victims groups and express our concern of over
any acts of harassments and intimidation of persons and groups
combating racism and racial discrimination. We call for the release
of human rights defenders and community and political leaders
unjustly imprisoned for their engagement against racism and racial
discrimination.
We express our
determination to actively use all the relevant instruments and
mechanisms for the protection of Human Rights, especially the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination, the International Convention on the Protection of
the Rights of all Migrant Workers and Members of their Families, the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination of
Women, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities,
the UNESCO Convention Against Discrimination in Education and the
ILO related conventions. We call for their speedy universal
ratification.
The 2001 World
Conference Against Racism became a catalyst for networking and
activism for anti-racist movements and many victims groups. It
allowed them to take their rightful place in partnership with the
movements against war and occupation, for human rights, for
sustainable development and the quest for social justice, believing
that another world is possible and necessary.
Now is the time
for a declaration of resolve to be made by Peoples, Governments and
the United Nations to safeguard the achievements of the World
Conference Against Racism. It is time to provide for the
implementation of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action in
its entirety.
We
call for Governments to decide on a 10-year Summit, a Durban +10, to
review the continued implementation of the Durban Declaration and
Programme of Action.
We
declare that irrespective of the decisions of Governments we will
join forces with all people of good will to launch our own Durban +
10 process in solidarity with all victims groups in order to ensure
that the combat against all forms of racism and racial
discrimination is moved forward.
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