D. 16.03.11 fra Niels-Erik Hansen <drc1@ drcenter.dk>
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DRC indbyder til Høring tirsdag d. 22. marts 2011, kl.
13.00, om
FN´s anbefalinger (Concluding
observations) om modarbejdelse af race diskrimination i Danmark.
Sted: Folketinget, Proviantgården
Lokale D
Program:
13 - 13.15 Velkomst v. Fakhra Mohammed
13.15 – 14.00 Redegørelse for FN´s anbefalinger v. medlem af FN’s racediskriminations komite Ion Diaconu
14.00 – 15.30 Paneldebat
Indbudte paneldeltagere: Yildiz Akdogan, Marianne Jelved, Naser Khader, Pia Kjærsgaard, Simon Emil Amnitzbøl, Kamal Quereshi, Per Ørum Jørgensen, Karsten Lauritzen, Line Barfoed, Pia Christmas Møller
15.30- 16.00 Spørgsmål fra salen.
Afrunding
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Tilmelding til: DRC boks 519, 2200 København N, eller e-mail drc@drcenter.dk, eller telefon 35363850.
Mødet er lavet med støtte fra Forskningsfonden.
United
Nations |
CERD/C/DNK/CO/18-19 |
International Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination |
Distr.: General
20 September 2010
Original: English
Committee on the Elimination
of Racial Discrimination
Seventy-seventh session
2–27 August
2010
Consideration of reports submitted by States parties
under article 9 of the Convention
Concluding observations of the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination
1. The Committee considered the eighteenth and
nineteenth periodic reports of Denmark (CERD/C/DNK/18-19), submitted in one
document, at its 2034th and 2035th meetings (CERD/C/SR.2034 and
CERD/C/SR.2035), held on 17 and 18 August 2010. At its 2047th meeting
(CERD/C/SR 2047), held on 26 August 2010, it adopted the following concluding
observations.
A. Introduction
2. The Committee welcomes the submission of the
combined eighteenth and nineteenth periodic reports of the State party, which
included responses to the concerns raised in the Committee’s previous
concluding observations (CERD/DEN/CO/17), and the opportunity thus offered to
resume the dialogue with the State party. It commends the State party for its
punctuality and consistency in the submission of periodic reports since it
became a party to the Convention, and the quality of the reports, which are in
strict conformity with the Committee’s guidelines. It also expresses
appreciation for the frank and sincere dialogue held with the delegation as
well as the oral responses provided to the list of themes and the wide range of
questions posed by the Committee members. On this point, the Committee wishes
to acknowledge the gender balance in the composition of the delegation and
notes with appreciation the inclusion in the delegation of a representative
from the Government of Greenland following the recent referendum that led to
self-government of the Greenlandic people.
3. The Committee notes with appreciation the input to
its proceedings by the Danish Institute for Human Rights (DIHR) and various
non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
GE.10-45162 CERD/C/DNK/CO/18-19 2
B. Positive aspects
4. The Committee welcomes the establishment of a
Division for Democratic Cohesion and Prevention of Radicalization under the
Ministry of Refugee, Immigration and Integration Affairs which is mandated to
coordinate the implementation of the initiatives of the action plan titled A
Common and Safe Future, for the prevention of radicalization and extremist
views among young people.
5. The Committee
welcomes the publication of the Action Plan on Ethnic Equal Treatment and
Respect for the Individual in July 2010, which is a revision of the Action Plan
to Promote Equal Treatment and Diversity and Combat Racism of 2003. The
Committee notes that the revised action plan will entail a multi-faceted effort
in combating racial discrimination, promoting diversity and equal
opportunities.
6. The Committee also welcomes the publication of a
guide based on the Act on Prohibition of Discrimination on the Labour Market,
which seeks to help organizations, employers, employees and others to understand
the rules of the labour market in this field.
7. The Committee
notes with appreciation that the State party consulted with civil society
organizations working in the area of human rights protection in connection with
the preparation of its periodic report.
C. Concerns and recommendations
8. The Committee
notes with regret that notwithstanding its previous concluding observations
recommending the incorporation of the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the State party finds it
unnecessary to do so because, arguably, the Convention is already a source of
law in Danish courts. However, the non-incorporation of international treaties
results in reluctance by lawyers and judges to invoke such treaties in Danish
courts. (art. 2)
The Committee reiterates its position that the State
party should incorporate the Convention into its legal system to ensure its
direct application before Danish Courts in order to afford all individuals its
full protection.
9. The Committee,
while taking note of the State party’s efforts to encourage reporting of hate
crimes through the preparation of guidelines on the handling of cases under
section 266 B of the Criminal Code, is concerned at the broad powers of the
Director of Public Prosecutions to stop investigations, withdraw charges or
discontinue cases, and at the large number of cases that have been discontinued
by the Director of Public Prosecutions, which would discourage reporting by
victims. The Committee is also concerned at the current proposals by various
politicians to repeal section 266 B, but welcomes the assurances by the State
party that the provision will not be repealed. In addition, the Committee is
concerned at the large number of complaints it receives under its
communications procedure provided for under article 14 of the Convention,
mainly in relation to hate crimes (arts. 4 (a) and (6))
CERD/C/DNK/CO/18-19
3
The Committee recommends that the State party should
limit the powers of the Director of Public Prosecutions by establishing an
independent and multicultural oversight body to assess and oversee the
decisions taken by the Director of Public Prosecutions with regard to cases
under section 266 B of the Criminal Code to ensure that discontinuance of cases
does not discourage victims from lodging complaints or promote impunity for
perpetrators of hate crimes. In line with its general recommendation No. 31
(2005), the Committee urges the State party to resist calls to repeal section
266 B, which would compromise the efforts and gains that the State party has
made in combating racial discrimination and hate crimes.
10. The Committee
regrets that the State party has neither provided satisfactory data on the
numbers and legal status of the Roma generally nor accounted for the Roma from
other European Union (EU) countries who settled in the State party during the
post-1990 period (arts. 2 and 5).
The Committee recommends that the State party take
appropriate measures to establish the numbers and legal status of the Roma in
the country. The State party should also provide shelter to the Roma and
Travellers in the country, afford them full protection from discrimination,
racial profiling, hate crimes, and facilitate their access to public services.
11. The Committee
notes with concern that applicants to the police service from ethnic
backgrounds other than Danish fail the police recruitment test in
disproportionate numbers, and also account for the high drop-out rates from
police colleges. The Committee is also concerned at the higher rates of
unemployment among immigrants and their descendants from countries outside the
EU, North America and the Nordic countries (arts. 2, 5 and 6)
The Committee urges the State party to adopt specific
measures to establish the main reasons why applicants from ethnic backgrounds
other than Danish fail the police recruitment test and drop out of police
colleges. The State party should strengthen its efforts in promoting people
from ethnic backgrounds other than Danish to serve as police officers in order
to achieve a racially balanced police service. The State party must also
strengthen its efforts to remove all impediments for migrants in the labour
market such as racial prejudices and stereotypes, by promoting a change of
mindset amongst employers through awareness-raising campaigns.
12. The Committee
notes the recent amendments to the Aliens Act, which introduce a new 100-point
system for obtaining a permanent residence permit, aimed, on the one hand, at
establishing a direct link between integration and obtaining a residence
permit, and, on the other, at encouraging migrants to make an effort to obtain
a residence permit. The Committee, however, regrets that this points-based
system introduces onerous and stringent requirements that would virtually
exclude beneficiaries of international protection (arts. 2, 5 and 6).
The Committee recommends that the State party take
specific measures to assess the implementation of this new system to ensure
that it does not exclude applicants on the basis of poverty, dependence on
State resources, level of education, failure to penetrate the labour market and
passing the Danish language test. Furthermore, the State party must ensure that
the new system does not exclude beneficiaries of international protection who
due to age, trauma or other vulnerabilities do not meet the criteria and
therefore cannot complete the integration targets set out in the law.
13. The Committee
notes with concern the legal requirement that foreign women who are victims of domestic
violence must have lived continuously in the State party for at least
CERD/C/DNK/CO/18-19
4
two (2) years before
cessation of cohabitation due to their spouse’s abuse in order to be eligible
for a permanent residence permit (art. 5(b)).
The Committee recommends that the State party take
measures to continuously and closely monitor the application of this legal
requirement to ensure that women who are victims of domestic violence are not
forced to cohabit with their abusive spouses so that they can complete the two
(2) year eligibility period for a residence permit. The State party should
adopt concrete measures to promote other options for eligibility for a
residence permit after cessation of cohabitation for women who fall short of
the two (2) year requirement.
14. The Committee
reiterates its concern at the restrictive conditions under Danish law with
regard to family reunification. This relates to the requirements that both
spouses must have attained the age of 24, and that their aggregate ties with
Denmark must be stronger than their ties with any other country unless the
spouse living in Denmark has been a Danish national or has been residing in
Denmark for more than 28 years. The Committee reiterates its concern that this
may lead to a situation where persons belonging to ethnic and national
backgrounds other than Danish are discriminated against in the enjoyment of
their right to family life, marriage and choice of spouse (art. 5 (d)(iv))
The Committee urges the State party to adopt concrete
measures to assess the racial impact of this legislation on the enjoyment of
the right to family life, marriage and choice of spouse. Furthermore, the study
must assess whether this law unduly restricts entry into marriage and whether
this limitation on the rights affected outweighs the mischief it seeks to
prevent, namely forced and early marriages. The State party should also
evaluate whether this requirement unduly restricts those people who satisfy the
minimum age requirement for contracting a lawful marriage in Denmark.
15. The Committee,
while it appreciates that the State party’s objective under the “anti-ghettoization” law is to prevent marginalized groupings and
not ethnic groupings, it regrets the lack of data on the impact that the
implementation of this law has on the affected people’s rights to freedom of
residence, the practice of their culture and preservation of their cultural
identities (arts. 5 (d) (i) and (e) (iii) and (vi))
The Committee
recommends that the State party assess the impact that the implementation of
the anti-ghettoization law has on the rights of
various ethnic groups to practise their culture, and ensure that it does not
have an assimilationist effect that leads to the loss
of cultural identities by those affected by this law.
16. The Committee, while noting that the government
has conferred autonomy and discretion on municipalities and private
institutions with regard to offering mother-tongue tuition, it regrets that it
has failed to provide general policy direction on this matter to municipalities
and other actors in the field. The Committee notes that mother-tongue teaching
is only offered to children from EU and European Economic Area (EEA) countries
and those from Faroes and Greenland in order to
maintain their language proficiency should they subsequently return to these
places. However, there is no explanation as to why people of other ethnic
groups that seek to benefit from mother-tongue tuition have not been included
in the programme (art. 5 (e) (v) and (vi))
CERD/C/DNK/CO/18-19 5
The Committee
recommends that the State party provide a general educational policy on this
matter to cover all groups and take appropriate measures to assess whether
people of other ethnic groups require mother-tongue teaching and that this be
extended to their children who can then benefit on an equal footing with
children from the EU, EEA countries, Faroes and
Greenland.
17. The Committee reiterates its concern with regard
to the decision of the Supreme Court handed down on 28 November 2003 relating
to the Thule Tribe of Greenland. The decision failed to follow established
international norms in the conceptualization of indigenous peoples. As a
result, the Supreme Court rendered a decision which found that the Thule Tribe
are not a distinct indigenous people notwithstanding their own perception as
such. The Committee further notes the case of Greenlandic people considered to
be “legally fatherless” because they were born out of wedlock to Danish men who
were in Greenland in the 1950s and 1960s. This status has an impact on matters
of family law, land ownership and inheritance (art. 5 (d) (vi))
The Committee reiterates that, pursuant to its general
recommendation No. 8 (1990) and other United Nations instruments,
the State party is urged to pay particular attention to self-identification as
a critical factor in the identification and conceptualization of a people as
indigenous. The Committee therefore recommends that, notwithstanding the
decision of the Supreme Court, the State party adopt measures to ensure that
self-identification is the primary means for determining whether a people are
indigenous or not. In this regard, the Committee recommends that the State
party adopt concrete measures to ensure that the status of the Thule Tribe reflects
established international norms on indigenous peoples’ identification.
The Committee urges the State party to take measures
to address the problems faced by the legally fatherless who, by virtue of
having been born out of wedlock, are negatively affected by various laws
including the laws governing family life, land ownership and inheritance.
18. The Committee, while welcoming the establishment
of the Board of Equal Treatment to consider complaints alleging discrimination
in all fields, notes that the prescribed procedure is very impersonal in that
individuals can only lodge complaints in writing, including through letters and
do not have to appear in person. The Committee further notes
that the Board is not in a position to obtain evidence such as explanations or
testimonies by the parties concerned, and that the secretariat of the Board can
dismiss complaints found to be unsuitable for consideration by the Board (art.
6).
The Committee recommends that the State party
strengthen the Board’s complaint-lodging procedure to enable complainants to
provide oral testimony, which will also assist the panel of the Board to assess
and appreciate the demeanour of the parties to the complaint. The Committee
urges the State party to revise the procedure of the Board to ensure that the
Secretariat does not usurp the powers of the Board by rejecting complaints
before they are considered by the panel.
19. The Committee notes with concern the lack of data
on the ethnic composition of prison populations which would assist it in
understanding the nature of crimes perpetrated by various ethnic groups or
nationals.
The Committee recalls its general recommendation No.
31 and urges the State party to compile data disaggregated by nationality
and/or ethnic origin and nature of the offence for all prisons in the State
party.
20. Bearing in mind the indivisibility of all human
rights, the Committee encourages the State party to consider ratifying those
international human rights treaties which it has not
CERD/C/DNK/CO/18-19 6
yet ratified, in
particular treaties whose provisions have a direct bearing on the subject of
racial discrimination, such as the International Convention on the Protection
of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families (1990).
22. The Committee recommends that the State party
continue consulting and expanding its dialogue with civil society organizations
working in the area of human rights protection, in particular in combating
racial discrimination, in connection with the preparation of the next periodic
report.
23. The Committee recommends that the State party
ratify the amendments to article 8, paragraph 6, of the Convention, adopted on
15 January 1992 at the fourteenth meeting of States parties to the Convention
and endorsed by the General Assembly in its resolution 47/111 of 16 December
24. The Committee
recommends that the State party’s reports be made readily available and accessible
to the public at the time of their submission, and that the observations of the
Committee with respect to these reports be similarly publicized in the official
and other commonly used languages, as appropriate.
25. Noting that the State Party submitted its core document in 1995, the
Committee encourages the State Party to submit an updated version in accordance
with the harmonized guidelines on reporting under the international human
rights treaties, in particular those on the common core document, as adopted by
the fifth inter-Committee meeting of the human rights treaty bodies held in
June 2006 (HRI/MC/2006/3).
27. The Committee also wishes to draw the attention of the State party
to the particular importance of recommendations 8, 9, 10, and 11, and request
the State party to provide detailed information in its next periodic report on
concrete measures taken to implement these recommendations.
28. The Committee recommends that the State party submit its 20th and
21st periodic reports in a single document, due on 8th January, 2013, taking
into account the guidelines for the CERD-specific document adopted by the
Committee during its seventy-first session (CERD/C/2007/1), and that it address
all points raised in the present concluding observations. The Committee also
urges the State party to observe the page limit of 40 pages for treaty-specific
reports and 60-80 pages for the common core document (see harmonized guidelines
for reporting contained in document HRI/GEN.2/Rev.6, para.
19).
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