Statements delivered in 2002 were heard and responded to by the UN.
Documents of 2002 in order of presentation:
1) Oral Statement to the
Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights
Fifty-Fourth Session
(2002)
Agenda Item 5 (c)
In 1997 and 1998 the
Sub-Commission passed two resolutions of concern to us. The first called upon
the Working Group on Minorities to consider how the Sub-Commission in its
future work might usefully address the continuing legal, political and economic
legacies of the African slave trade, as experienced by Black communities
throughout the
At the 4th Session of the Working Group on Minorities we saw that the protections offered minorities under Article 27 of the ICCPR did not apply to us, the descendants of enslaved Africans, for we have been denied a collective international identity and denied our original mother tongues, cultures and religions, which is the total destruction of our essence, although some of us are unaware.
One of the decisions of the Working Group on Minorities was to assign Mr. Jose Bengoa to write a paper on the existence and recognition of minorities. This paper was a tremendous benefit to us, for it started the process of our recognition as minorities undergoing ethnogenesis.
In 2001 the Working
Group participated in a Saturday session held in
In
The Working Group on Minorities has acknowledged our decision to be recognized as Afro Descendant Minorities. We ask the Sub-Commission to acknowledge our decision also.
In conclusion, we recognize that as minorities we do not have full equality before the law due to the total destruction of our essence, our identity, which, as we have seen, is the loss of our identity internationally. We believe the reinstatement of us to the human family, and reparation can take place with the continued effort of the Sub-Commission and the Working Group on Minorities.
Mr. Silis Muhammad
2) Written Statement to the
Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights
Fifty-Fourth Session
Provisional Agenda Item 5:
Prevention of Discrimination
(c) Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities
August 2002
The following
statement is offered by Mr. Silis Muhammad on behalf of
the Afro Descendant Minority in the
We know that it is through the resolutions of the Sub-Commission and the diligent efforts of the Working Group on Minorities that we Afro Descendants approach collective human rights. We wish to continue to trust the Sub-Commission and the expertise of the Working Group on Minorities.
In 1997 the Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights passed resolution, #E/CN.4/SUB.2/RES/1997/5, in which the Sub-Commission called upon the Working Group on Minorities to consider how the Sub-Commission in its future work might usefully address the continuing legal, political and economic legacies of the African slave trade, as experienced by Black communities throughout the Americas. Following that resolution, in 1998, the Working Group on Minorities invited us to attend their 4th Session. We did attend that Session, and we have continued to attend and offer statements to all sessions of the Sub-Commission, the Commission on Human Rights and the Working Group on Minorities since that time.
At the 4th Session of the Working Group on Minorities we examined the Declaration on the Rights of Minorities, and it appeared to us that the so-called African Americans did not fit in the United Nations system. We had been told we are "minorities" by the United States Government, but we saw that we did not enjoy such recognition internationally. We saw that the protections offered minorities under Article 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Minorities did not apply to us, for we do not have our original identity, our mother tongue, culture or religion. At that first meeting one of the esteemed members of the Working Group on Minorities said, "We will have to find out where you fit." Today I thank him. Over the years this Working Group has demonstrated that it is not willing to leave us out.
One of the decisions of the 4th Session of the Working Group on Minorities was to assign a member of the Working Group to write a paper on the existence and recognition of minorities. The paper was presented in the year 2000 as document #E/CN.4/Sub.2/AC.5/2000/WP.2. This expert paper has been of tremendous benefit to us, for it started the process of our recognition as minorities undergoing ethnogenesis. During the 52nd Session of the Sub-Commission we expected to hear a presentation of the paper, and we were disappointed when it was not presented. We continue to ask the experts of the Sub-Commission to discuss our issues on the Sub-Commission floor and consider this Working Paper of the Working Group on Minorities, which we believe offers the most advanced understanding of our situation.
In 1998 the
Sub-Commission passed resolution, #E/CN.4/SUB.2/RES/1998/24, in which the
Sub-Commission urged the Working Group on Minorities to include on its agenda
an item on issues related to the legacies of the slave trade on the Black
communities throughout the
From that time
forward the Working Group on Minorities has continued to address our issues in
a most forthright manner. In the year 2000 the Working Group announced that it
would hold regional seminars to study the issues of African descendants in the
Then, in 2002 the
Working Group on Minorities held a long awaited and historic meeting in La Ceiba,
In
The Working Group on Minorities has acknowledged our decision to be recognized as Afro Descendant Minorities. We ask the Sub-Commission to acknowledge our decision also. We urge the Sub-Commission to strongly support the efforts of the Working Group on Minorities on our behalf, as we see this Working Group as having gained invaluable expertise on our issues. Through the efforts of the Working Group we have begun to establish a foundation upon which we can proceed in our efforts, as recognition, restoration and reconciliation are our primary concerns.
In conclusion, we recognize that as Minorities we do not have full equality before the law due to the intentional destruction of our original identity, and yet we believe appropriate reparation and restoration can take place with the continued effort of the Sub-Commission and the Working Group on Minorities.
3) Oral Statement to the
Working Group on Minorities
8th Session, May
2002
Greetings Mr. Chairman and Members of the Working Group on Minorities. We know that it is through the diligent efforts of the Working Group on Minorities that we Afro Descendants approach collective human rights, and we wish to continue to trust the expertise of this Working Group.
If we learned
anything in La Ceiba,
It has been five years since I first came before this group. At that time I had examined the Declaration on the Rights of Minorities, and it appeared to me that African Americans did not fit in the UN system. I felt that the protections offered minorities did not apply to us, for we do not have our original identity, our mother tongue, culture or religion. At that first meeting one of the esteemed members of this group said, "We will have to find out where you fit." Today I thank him. Over the years this Working Group has demonstrated that it is not willing to leave us out.
In 1998 the Working Group on Minorities assigned one of its members to write a paper on the existence and recognition of minorities. The paper has been of tremendous benefit, for it started the process of our recognition as minorities undergoing ethnogenesis. Today I thank the esteemed expert who wrote that paper.
In 1999 the Working
Group on Minorities placed African descendants in the
Mr. Silis Muhammad
4) Intervención
presentada en el Grupo de Trabajo sobre Minorías
8ª sesión,
Mayo 2002
Les presento Sr. Presidente y Miembros
Sí
algo aprendimos en La Ceiba,
Han transcurrido 5 años desde mi primera venida a este Grupo. Desde entonces yo revisé la Declaración de los Derechos de las Minorías y me pareció que los Afro-americanos no se encontraban dentro del Sistema de las Naciones Unidas. Sentí que la protección dada a las Minorías no encajaba con nosotros, al no tener nuestra propia identidad, nuestra lengua materna, nuestra cultura, religión. En esa primera reunión, uno de los estimados miembros de este Grupo dijo "tendremos que buscar una salida para que puedan entrar". Ahora, se lo agradezco. A través de los años este Grupo de Trabajo nos ha demostrado que no nos quiere dejar afuera.
En 1998, el Grupo de Trabajo sobre Minorías asignó a uno de sus miembros a escribir un informe
sobre la existencia y el reconocimiento de las minorías. Este informe ha sido de gran beneficio, y así comenzó el proceso de nuestro reconocimiento
En
1999, EL Grupo de Trabajo sobre Minorías tenía en su agenda a los Afro-descendientes de América. Esta fue la primera vez, a mi conocer que se puso en la Agenda de las reuniones
5) Written Statement to the
58th Session of the Commission on Human Rights under
Provisional
Agenda Item 14. Specific groups and individuals (b)
Minorities
March/April 2002
1. The United
Nations has not, as yet, recognized us: we who are the African American peoples
or nations in North, Central and
2. In the Americas
Region and throughout the Diaspora we, who are the descendants of slaves, are
filled with dissatisfaction, and many of us do not know its source. The African
American people in the
3. We have cried out in many ways over many years for the restoration of our dignity as a people. Yet the U.S. Government and other nations commit, daily, the international wrongful act of denying our existence while claiming respect for human rights. It is our desire to reconstitute ourselves and reconstruct our lost ties, with UN assistance. It is also our desire to receive reparations from the U.S. Government for the ongoing loss of our mother tongue and our internationally recognized political identity.
4. We recognize that
the United Nations has made some attempts to assist us. In 1997 the
Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights passed a
resolution, #E/CN.4/SUB.2/RES/1997/5, in which the Sub-Commission called upon
the Working Group on Minorities to consider how the Sub-Commission in its
future work might usefully address the continuing legal, political and economic
legacies of the African slave trade, as experienced by Black communities
throughout the Americas. In 1998 the Sub-Commission again passed a resolution,
#E/CN.4/SUB.2/RES/1998/24, in which the Sub-Commission urged the Working Group
on Minorities to include on its agenda an item on issues related to the
legacies of the slave trade on the Black communities throughout the
5. The Working Group on Minorities is aware that we, the African American people, do not fit into a category within the UN system due to the immoral slavery and its illegal lingering effects: especially the deliberate acts of the U.S. Government. In 1998 the Working Group assigned Mr. Jose Bengoa to write a working paper on the existence and recognition of minorities. In the year 2000 this working paper, #E/CN.4/Sub.2/AC.5/2000/WP.2, was presented to the Working Group on Minorities, and accepted by the group. In the paper Mr. Bengoa demonstrated an astute understanding of the ethnogenesis of African Americans. Regrettably this distinguished paper has not been selected for presentation on the Sub-Commission floor.
6. To date, the Sub-Commission has not invited the Working Group on Minorities to report specifically on the work and study that it has been engaged in regarding African Americans. Consequently, the Sub-Commission has not addressed the continuing legal, political and economic legacies of the African slave trade as it had in 1997 indicated a desire to do. While we appreciate and highly value the efforts of the Working Group on Minorities on our behalf, we believe that little progress can be made in our recognition and restoration without the continued interest of the Sub-Commission.
7. Therefore we urgently recommend that the Commission on Human Rights pass a resolution requesting that the Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights place African Americans on its agenda, alongside Indigenous Peoples and Minorities. Placement on the agenda of the Sub-Commission would be a welcome first step in official UN recognition of the African Americans.
8. As the World Conference Against Racism demonstrated to the world, African Americans in the Americas Region and the Diaspora are united in a mass call for reparations. In response to the mass call for reparations, the World Conference, in it's Program of Action, made a request of the Commission on Human Rights as follows: "7. Requests the Commission on Human Rights to consider establishing a working group or other mechanism of the United Nations to study the problems of racial discrimination faced by people of African descent living in the African Diaspora and make proposals for the elimination of racial discrimination against people of African descent."
9. The World Conference Against Racism, in paragraph 14 of its Declaration, recognizes that for African Americans, racial discrimination is a consequence of slavery. Thus we would welcome a working group or other mechanism of the Commission on Human Rights if the mechanism has as its primary focus the lingering effects of slavery, and the restoration of our people. In particular, we would request that the proposed working group or other mechanism focus upon the establishment of category in which the UN and world community can recognize African Americans collectively and provide for reparations and restoration of the human rights of the African American people. We would also urge the Commission on Human Rights to take advantage of the work that has already been accomplished by the Working Group on Minorities on behalf of African Americans, and in particular the scholarship of Mr. Jose Bengoa.
10. In our view, and in the view of the organizations and leaders that support us, the dissatisfaction of our people will not be addressed with solutions that are ultimately superficial. The United Nations, and the national governments that have authority over us, cannot repair the damage done by slavery with reparations such as development money, affirmative action or anti-discrimination laws alone. We have lost our original identity and we have been forced to assume the identity of our slave masters. One man cannot live in another man's "skin." It is against nature, and inhumane. Our dissatisfaction will increase until our ethnogenesis is recognized and our human rights are restored.
11. At the World
Conference Against Racism the U.S. Government turned
its back and walked out on our cries with the same disdain that it has shown
internally toward our cries for 400 years. Today we turn to the Commission on
Human Rights and the world community with increasing urgency. We fear that if
our prayer for UN recognition of our existence is not heard, and if restoration
does not take place, we will not be able to hold back a flood of anger that the
world only glimpsed in
6) Oral Statement to the 58th
Session of the Commission on Human Rights
Agenda Item 14 (b) Specific
Groups and Individuals: Minorities
March/April 2002
We, the Afro Descendant Minority living in the United States of America, would like to thank the United Nations for requesting that the Commission on Human Rights consider establishing a working group or other mechanism of the United Nations to study the problems of racial discrimination faced by people of African descent living in the African Diaspora and make proposals for the elimination of racial discrimination against people of African descent.
While we appreciate the encouragement to States to deal with the problems Afro Descendants face, a study of the problems of racial discrimination would not address the root problem, especially the negation of the essence of the victims. Racial discrimination is just the end product of our having suffered through slavery. Therefore, it is not enough to address the issue of discrimination ONLY. Justice calls for an examination of the entire cause-and-effect phenomena stemming from our having been slaves!
We, in our search for our identity, have declared ourselves Afro Descendants. It is our identity which was taken, and it is the lack our identity which is a constant source of anger and despair today. Because we lack our identity we have suffered the denial by history of many of our rights. Economically and developmentally we are currently suffering the aftermath of what took place during slavery.
The UN has noted that some States have taken the initiative to apologize and have paid reparation, where appropriate, for grave and massive human rights violations. Afro Descendants have had our mother tongue, culture and religion forcibly removed: hence, our loss of identity and the negation of our essence. We Afro Descendants have not existed in the United Nations system. Therefore our prayer is for official recognition of our self-chosen collective identity and reparations.
Since racial discrimination is found in the "negation of the essence of the victims," this is our proposal for the elimination of racial discrimination.
Mr. Silis Muhammad