Brazil - Brazzil Mag - For UN Rapporteur Brazil Needs Affirmative Action to Deal with Marginalization
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For UN Rapporteur Brazil Needs Affirmative Action to Deal with Marginalization PDF Print E-mail
Written by Érica Sato   
Wednesday, 26 October 2005

Racial discrimination is a structural and historical problem in Brazilian society, according to Doudou Diène, special rapporteur for the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Commission on Contemporary Forms of Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Intolerance.

At the invitation of the Brazilian government, Diène spent 10 days meeting with representatives of the government and civil society and visited Salvador, Recife, Pesqueira, Rio de Janeiro, and São Paulo. His trip to Brazil ends today with a meeting with president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, in Brasília.

Conversing Tuesday, October 25, with the press, Diène emphasized three motives behind his visit to Brazil. The first reason is the country's cultural, racial, and ethnic richness. The second reason is the possibility of a reflection on the formation of Brazilian society, which, in his view, possesses, besides this diversity, foundations built on a conservative, exclusionary, and colonial model. He refers to this characteristic as "structural ethnic racism."

The third and final reason for his visit to Brazil is to verify what the country has done to promote racial equality. "Based on all of this, therefore, I decided to come to Brazil to appraise the precise reality of the situation," Diène affirmed.

In Brazil the rapporteur visited Brasília, Salvador, Recife, Pesqueira, Rio de Janeiro, and São Paulo. During his visits he met with representatives of shantytown communities, communities of descendants of runaway slaves, and indigenous communities.

"I also visited the Maré shantytown in Rio, where I could observe that, despite the violence surrounding it, it is really trying to discover its own solutions, for its self-esteem and survival," Diène commented.

Diène affirms that these are preliminary surveys and will be released on the 7th in the UN General Assembly. According to him, the final report should be ready in December and published in February.

His recommendation to Brazil was: "I think that affirmative actions in societies that have historically been discriminated, men, women, and children, are policies that have to be adopted. It is the only way to rectify this marginalization."

Agência Brasil
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Comments (3)Add Comment
nothing surprising....
written by Guest, October 26, 2005
...nothing new for the past 500 years !!!!

No UN report or travel was necessary !!!!

Everything is shown daily...on TV...as to Brazil life !!!!! Soap operas are just diverting the reality and have every poor brazilian dream !!!!!!!!!
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I couldn\'t have said it better.
written by Guest, October 28, 2005
NGO's have written these reports many times in the pass. They have visited corrupt politicians that are PRO at lip service and as soon as the NGO's are in a plane out of the country is business as usual. The reports should be written on toilet paper for quick reading and easy disposal. Education/jobs is the answer.
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Affirmative action
written by Meyre Santana, January 27, 2007
The most incredible for us is that Professors of University of Rio de Janeiro, University of São Paulo have the same point of view of TV Globo and Veja Magazine. We have a very good example professor Ivonne Maggi from UFRJ wrote a preface of a book written by one of Globo big bosses, ALI KAMEL, his work of art is entitled we are not racists. But, If turn on our tvs in Brazil you see a soap opera with lots of whites and almost no blacks and we never have black families. Those people who constructed and conserve this country how it is are totally against affirmative action. They are spreading hate. That is why we every day listen to tragedies,as the example of young boys locked a family in a car and burned them alive in order to have some goods.
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