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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 16
March 2005
Press Release No: L/12/2005
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
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MESSAGE ON THE INTERNATIONAL DAY FOR THE ELIMINATION OF RACIAL
DISCRIMINATION
21 March 2005
Forty-five years ago today, 69 demonstrators
were shot and killed in the Sharpeville massacre, during a non-violent
protest against apartheid. Each year, the United Nations marks
this anniversary by drawing special attention to the continuing
fight against all forms of racial discrimination.
Despite decades of efforts to eradicate it, the
virus of racism continues to infect human relations and human
institutions in all parts of our globe. Today, the old strains
of this disease, such as institutionalized discrimination, indirect
disadvantage, racist violence, hate crimes, harassment and persecution,
are compounded by new forms of discrimination, seemingly defying
many of the gains we have made. The Internet is used for the
propagation of racism, the number of victims of human trafficking
is growing, xenophobic arguments in political discourse are
on the rise, and innocent people are “racially profiled”
in the name of distorted notions of security. Even anti-semitism
is once again rearing its ugly head, six decades after the liberation
of extermination camps in which the entire world saw the barbaric
extremes to which racism, if not confronted, can lead.
No one can be neutral in the fight against such
intolerance. And we must not give up either the struggle against
racism or hope for victory. In 2001, the Wold Conference against
Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance
adopted the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action as a
blueprint for States to work together to eradicate racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. Education
and awareness-raising, effective national laws and policies,
unbiased media: each of these can help foster a culture of tolerance
and peace. With the joint commitment of human rights defenders,
governments, courts, parliaments, non-governmental organizations
and independent national human, we can and must overcome.
The United Nations will continue to do its part
as well. Through the work of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights, the Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Racism,
the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, the
Commission on Human Rights, UNESCO, and each and every person
employed by the Organization, we must continue to seek the realization
of the Charter’s vision of “respect for human rights
without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion.”
Indeed, today I am putting before Member States important proposals
to strengthen this human rights machinery so that it can combat
evils such as racism more effectively and consistently.
This year in Geneva, the Office of the High Commissioner
for Human Rights will mark the day by convening a panel on effective
practices to overcome hate crimes. In Paris, UNESCO is organizing
youth workshops and cultural events within the framework of
the International Coalition of Cities against Racism. And in
New York, a series of panels will look at progress in global
efforts to combat racism and racial discrimination.
As we remember the sacrifices of Sharpeville,
and the sufferings and victories of people across the years
and around the world in combating racism, let us today heed
the call of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to “reaffirm
faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth
of the human person, and in the equal rights of men and women.”
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