By Kali Akuno
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement and Durban + 10 Coalition
Overview
In 2011, at the conclusion of the 10 year commemoration of
the World Conference Against Racism (WCAR) and the Durban Declaration and
Program of Action (DDPA), the Durban + 10 Coalition, in addition to several
international non-governmental organizations and members of the African bloc
and the Group of 77 (G-77) nations, proposed to the General Assembly (GA) of
the United Nations (UN) that a Decade of
People of African Descent be declared and implemented from 2012 through
2022.
While the General Assembly (GA) has considered the Decade
proposal on several occasions since the fall of 2011, it has basically stalled
as a result of the resistance to it mounted by the United States (US) and
several members of the European Union (EU). The resistance of the US and EU
states is centered around the Durban Declaration and Program of Action (DDPA)
being a fundamental point of orientation and program development for the
Decade. The US and various members of the EU have been opposed to the DDPA
since its inception in 2001. And they want to make sure that the DDPA has no
influence on the Decade and any program of action that is associated with it.
As the approval process continues to drag out within the
General Assembly (GA), the US and EU are making steady progress to divorce the
Decade and its adoption from the DDPA. Any force concerned with justice for
Africa and African people throughout the Diaspora cannot allow this to happen!
The DDPA is one of the most important documents ever
produced by the United Nations (UN) pertaining to people of African descent. A
few of its most critical contributions are that it recognizes the
trans-Atlantic slave trade as a crime against humanity, it acknowledges the
economic roots of slavery, the ongoing impact enslavement has upon the social
and economic status of people of African descent throughout the world, and states
unequivocally that restitution is needed to address the crime of enslavement
and the unequal and inequitable systems it has produced.
Given the global scourge of anti-Black racism and the
continuing challenges posed by the legacies of the slave trade, slavery, and
colonialism, it is critical that there be a Decade of People of African Decent to
challenge theses issues in the 21st century. However, we must do everything
within our power to make sure that the Decade addresses the deep structural
issues confronting African people, and do more than just affirm the cultural
contributions of African people. To do this, the Decade must stand on the
foundations of the DDPA, and use it as the basis of its programmatic work.
What You Can Do
1.
We encourage all justice loving organizations to
endorse the call for Decade of People of African Descent based on the
implementation of the Durban Declaration and Program of Action.
2.
We encourage you and your organization to
contact the Ambassador to the United Nations (UN) of the nation-state you are a
citizen or resident of and demand that they support the Decade and the
inclusion of the DDPA into its programmatic work.
3.
We encourage you and your organization to
contact the Secretary General (SG) of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, and
demand that he push for the Decade to be approved, ensure that it fully
incorporates the DDPA, and that the program drafted by the Working Group of People
of African descent be adopted, promoted, and fully funded as the core basis of
its implementation. The Secretary general can be contacted via mail at United
Nations, SA-1B15, New York, NY 10027. By phone at 212.963.7162 or fax at
212.963.7055.
4.
We encourage you and your organization to
contact the representatives of the various alliances within the United Nations
(UN) - Africa bloc, the Islamic bloc, the Group of 77 (G77), and the
Non-Aligned Movement – and implore them to remain firm on their support and
commitment to the Decade and the DDPA.
5.
Finally, we encourage you and your organization
to organize your own educational and promotional events for the Decade and the
DDPA. It is critical that we inform our own social bases and the general public
about the importance of the Decade and the DDPA as a means of addressing the
human rights crisis confronting people of African descent.
To sign on or for more details please contact Kali Akuno,
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement and Co-Convener of the Durban + 10 Coalition at kaliakuno@mxgm.org.
No comments:
Post a Comment