Member Since: 1/1/2014
Posts: 14,321
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Ferguson Included In U.N. Report On US Racial Discrimination
The U.S. Record on Racial Discrimination is on the Whole World's Agenda
Quote:
As the United Nations this week debated America's record on race, one name was on everyone's minds: Michael Brown. Not only Americans have been riveted this week by the tragic killing of the unarmed teenager, the subsequent protests, and the militarized response of law enforcement in Ferguson, Mo.
The events in the overwhelmingly black suburb of St. Louis came as the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination reviewed U.S. compliance with the world's leading anti-discrimination legal instrument, which the United States ratified 20 years. The gap between the rights guaranteed by our Constitution on one hand, and the reality of persistent racism that continues to plague our society on the other, could not have been made more relevant by current events.
That gap is just as stark when viewed from the lens of international human rights law. This week, in Geneva, Switzerland, the U.N. committee that oversees compliance with the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination placed the U.S. record under the spotlight. Committee members, along with leading human rights and race discrimination experts from all over the world, heard from high-level representatives of the U.S. government in a large delegation as well as from advocates and victims of human rights abuses.
The Committee expressed deep concern at the circumstances surrounding Mr. Brown's shooting as well as over other recent deaths of unarmed African-American men – like Eric Garner, John Crawford, Ezell Ford, and others – at the hands of law enforcement. They heard heartbreaking testimony from the mother of Trayvon Martin and the father of Jordan Davis, both of whom lost their sons in violent circumstances that underscored the overt and subconscious forms of racism that our country continues to face. The U.S. delegate said in response to the committee's questions that the Department of Justice has opened a civil rights investigation into the Brown case.
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https://www.aclu.org/blog/human-righ...-worlds-agenda
The committee's final report and recommendations will be available on August 29.
Basically we're talked about for gun crime, racial profiling, border situation, violence against women, Guantanamo Bay, etc.
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