Racism endangers human rights of all persons in Europe – EU High Representative
Brussels, Belgium (PANA) – Systemic racism in Europe runs deep across all strands of society and structures and jeopardises the promotion, protection and realisation of human rights of all persons, the High Representative of the European Union has admitted.
In a declaration issued on Friday ahead of the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, to be marked Sunday, 21 March 2021, the European Union confirms its unabated commitment to the elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance including its contemporary forms.
“The EU recognises the existing challenges and is determined to tackle them,” said the High Representative, acknowledging “the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed the persistence of racism and discrimination in our societies and has further deepened pre-existing difficulties, sometimes increasing pressure on minorities.”
According to the 2018 report on ‘Being black in the EU’, 39% of people of African descent felt racially discriminated in the previous 5 years.
The report pointed out that racial discrimination can result in violence, harassment, hurdles to inclusion and discriminatory profiling. Other persons face daily racism and xenophobia in different forms: from hate crimes to difficult access to services or exclusion.
On 18 September 2020, the EU adopted its Anti-racism action plan for 2020-2025 to step up action against racism acknowledging that racism is not only perpetrated by individuals, but can also be structural.
“This is a first good step. It must be accompanied by concrete actions,” said the High Representative, recalling that the European Commission adopted on 7 October 2020, a strengthened EU Roma Strategic Framework for Equality, Inclusion and Participation, aiming at promoting inclusion in the four sectoral policy areas of education, employment, healthcare and housing.
“Today the EU has organised an Anti-Racism Summit to build a truly anti-racist union. One that promotes prevention as well as sanction and where action that fosters inclusion is the norm. The international convention on the elimination of all forms of racial discrimination shall remain our compass in this collective journey to a more just, equitable and inclusive society,” said the declaration.
According to its High Representative, the EU will engage constructively in the context of the 20th anniversary of the adoption of the Durban Declaration and programme of action.
Affirming that the EU and its Member States are strong supporters of multilateral cooperation to fight racism, the EU official stated: “We work closely with the UN and with global and local civil society in all corners of the world and want to recognise their critical contribution.
“Additionally, the EU Human Rights and Democracy Action Plan (2020-2024) sets an enabling framework to work on protecting people, eliminating inequalities, discrimination and exclusion with the ambition to make anti-racism a key feature of our dialogue and cooperation with partner countries.”
The declaration emphasised that the fight against racism needs sustained leadership and the engagement from all institutions. “It also requires the mobilisation of us all, across all generations and all communities. Let us work together for a world where racism has no place and let us lead by example,” the EU High Representative added.
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