PAKISTAN
Statement by
H.E. MR. Abdul
Sattar,
Foreign Minister of Pakistan
at the
World Conference Against Racism,
Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and
Related Intolerance
Madam President,
It is an honour to
be in South Africa. The history o f your people - their travail, their fortitude
in the protracted struggle ag~inst tyrannical Apartheid and their glorious
triumph - is an inspiring epic of humanity's irresistible determination to win
freedom and equality, and glorify the dignity of the human person.
This
being my first visit to South Africa, I want to offer tribute to Nelson Mandela.
His life testifies to the transcendence of the human spirit over oppression and
persecution, hatred and vengeance. He nd his intrepid companions - Steve Beko,
Olivier Tambo, Aflred Xuma, Walter Sisulu, Govan Mbeki and Thabo Mbeki among
others - etched their immortal names in the history of humanity's march to
civilization. They suffered and sacrificed so that others may live in honour and
dignity, free from alien domination and dehumanizing discrimination. We join in
the grief of the people of South Africa at the passing of Govan
Mbeki.
Madam President,
Long before Pakistan won independence in
1947, the leaders of our freedom struggle denounced the Apartheid laws enacted
by the Smuts regime as "sinister" and a "relapse to the prejudices and taboos of
the dark ages." In another resolution they declared: "The conscience of the
world cannot turn a deaf ear to the groans of the oppressed". Pakistan sponsored
the inscription of the item on Apartheid on the agenda of the UN General
Assembly and extended unstinting support for struggle of the South African
people for human dignity, equality and non-discrimination.
I
recall the historical position taken by our nation not to seek credit but to
emphasize that the cause we upheld was - and is - right and righteous,founded in
principles of justice and in the articles of our faith.God says:
"O
humankind'. We created you male and female,and made you nations and tribes, that
you may know one another. Sure ly the noblest among you in the sight of Allah is
the best in conduct."1
Prophet Mohammad (may peace be upon him) said:
"Neither a black person has superiority over a white person nor a white perso
over a black person."
Madam President,
The Pakistan delegation
comes to this Conference with pride in the faith of our people in human
equality, and the commitment of the founding fathers of our State to practice
and promote equal rights among people of different races and religions at the
domestic as well as international levels.
Since independence, the
Government of Pakistan has taken steps to protect and promote equality and
tolerance at the internatiolal level as well as at home.
Our Constitution
forbids discrimination on grounds of race, religion, caste or sect . 2"All
citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal protection of law." 3
"Every citizen shall have the right to profess, practice and propagate his
religion." 4 The Constitution imposes an obligation on the State to "safeguard
the legitimate rights and interests of minorities, including their due
representation in the Federal and Provincial services." Affirmative action to
implement that provision includes reserved seats and weighted representation of
minorities in Federal and Provincial Assemblies and elected urban and rural
Councils.
Madam President,
Pakistan participated
constructively in the preparatory work for this Conference. We shall do the same
here, confident that under your wise and
able leadership, this conference
will achieve significant success. The sagacious contribution of Secretary
General Kofi Annan and the sincere endeavors of Human Rights High Commissioner,
Mary Robinson, will be essential ingredients for a consensus outcome on ways and
npeans to address and overcome the scourge of racism.
Racism and racial
discrimination were inventions of the powerful. Their egocentric claims to
superiority were self-serving illusions, rooted in avarice and exploitation.
Colonial powers took shelter behind presumptuous slogans - "White man's burden",
"Civilizing Mission" and "Manifest Destiny" - to justify slavery, colonial
domination and exploitation. Indigenous populations of new continents were
subjected to slaughter and
genocide.
The past cannot be undone, but
clearly the scars of deep wounds will not heal with the passage of time alone.
Nor will verbal atonement suffice. A measure of restitution is necessary,
through concrete affirmative action to redress the economic, social and
psychological ravages suff~red by victim
communities.
Even while
rectifying the wrongs of the past, the world community cannot be complacent
about the present situation. Racism, xenophobia and intolerance persist.
Millions have perished in the genocide in Rwanda, ethnic cleansing in Bosnia
Herzegovina and in Kosovo. As we speak, savage repression is taking place in
several parts of the world.
It is a sad commentary on the painful crawl
of human 'Icivilization that policies of domination, racial prejudice,
xenophobia and intolerance persist in our own time. Sadder still, politically
motivated propagandists, sometimes in scholarly garb, concoct irrational
theories to demonize people of other races and religions, predicting, justifying
and indeed inciting vendettas by one human community against
another.
Madam President,
Vilification of Islam, verging on
racism, is an extremely disturbing trend. A billion Muslims are outraged that
their religion of peace, with its
liberal, humanist ideals, is misunderstood
and deliberately defamed and maligned by xenophobic lobbies.
It is sad
that those who were the victims of racism - the Holocaust - are themselves
succumbing to false rationales to justify and generate support
for their
repression and discrimination against other peoples. An Israeli Prime Minister
projected his country's policy against the Palestinian people
as a fight
against "the threat of Islamic terror groups not only to Israel (but to) all
moderate regimes."
Projecting the Palestinian people's struggle for
self-determination as terrorism is a deliberate, discriminatory and unacceptable
justification for
the policies of blockade, assassination, collective
punishment and settler colonization which are being imposed against the
Palestinian people. The Conference cannot but speak out on this issue.
It
is sad that, in our own region, this theme of denigrating the struggle for
self-determination as terrorism, and associating terrorisml, with Islam,
is
being actively promoted to justify the on-going brutal repression of the
Kashmiri people. The effort by Indian publicists to exploit prevalent prejudices
cannot mask the fact that seventy-five thousand Kashmiris have been killed in
the last decade of their struggle for freedom, that a solution for Kashmir will
have to respond to the wishes of the Kashmir people, and that such a solution is
essential to establish friendly relations between Pakistan and
India.
Madam President,
During the preparations for this
Conference, the OIC members adopted two non-papers which outlined their concerns
relating to Palestine as well as Jammu and Kashmir and other issues of concern
to the Islamic countries.
The OIC paper on Palestine has already been
submitted during the negotiations in Geneva. I wish to inform the Conference of
the Second OIC paper, whose text reads as
follows:
Quote
"We express our concern at the grave
violations of human rights in many parts of the world and express our
determination to work together to prevent their occurrence. The victims of human
rights violations in occupied Azerbaijan territories and in Jammu and Kashmir
must never be forgotten.
We stress importance of full implementation of
the Dayton peace accords in Bosnia/Herzegovina and economic recovery for the
consolidation of peace and stability. We are deeply concerned about the
difficulties faced by the returnees and the fate of over 20,000 missing persons
and absence of functional central
institutions."
Unquote
Madam President,
A
contemporary and ugly manifestation of racism is the discrimination against
non-European migrants to the affluent countries. Resisting the logic of free
movement of goods, capital and services, some industrialized States exclude
immigrants on basis of race or national origin. Political parties in some of
these countries openly engage in virulent tirades against Asian and African
migrants. State authorities remain apathetic to discrimination in wages,
housing, and education, and even to incidents of violence against
migrants.
Some States prohibit discrimination on paper but do not act to
prevent and punish violations. Their authorities abuse anti-terrorism laws to
detain
immigrants claiming to possess ",secret evidence". Media in these
countries promote prejudice and discrimination.
Xenophobic political
groups in some countries openly proclaim and advocate discrimination and
exclusion on basis of race or religion. Muslim girls and women are frequent
victims in education and employment if they prefer to wear apparel appropriate
to their own culture and tradition.
Paradoxically, some of these very
countries criticize emergent polities for systemic imperfections and absence of
complete equality among citizens. Ignoring the Biblical exhortation they behold
the mote in their brother's eye, but do not consider the beam in their
own.
Madam President,
Pakistan ,hopes that the Declaration and
Programme of Action to be adopted by this Conference will reject imposition of
concepts and value systems of one civilization on others. We must instead
encourage harmony in diversity.
The Vatican is to be commended for
launching the Interfaith Dialogue to overcome the prejudices of the past and
strive for mutual understanding. Similarly laudable is Iranian President Seyed
Mohammad Khatami's initiative for a " Dialogue among Civilizations".
The
world community will benefit by promoting understanding and respect for all
cultures and civilizations. It will inculcate tolerance between individuals,
groups and nations.
This important conference provides an opportunity to
initiate further programmes and actions to comprehensively address and overcome
the scourges of racisms, xenophobia and related intolerance.
Past crimes
must be acknowledged and affirmative action set in motion to repair the ravages
inflicted on human communities. To that end, Pakistan suggests that this
Conference request the UN Secretary General to appoint a group of eminent
experts with a mandate to recommend appropriate measures for redress and
restitution.
We must uphold the rights of indigenous peoples and ethnic
groups to retain and express their distinctive identities.
The rights of
migrant and expatriate communities to maintain their cultural and religious
identities must be forcefully affirmed.
Poverty is the consequence of and
also a justification for racism. The elimination of racism can be most
effectively advanced by bridging the gap between the rich and the poor, within
and across national boundaries. This Conference must adopt recommendations for
action at the national and international level to promote equitable economic
development throughout the world on the basis of human solidarity. Globalization
should advance global development.
National legislation must be
adopted and effectively implemented to suppress and eradicate racist ideologies
and practices. The sense of impunity for racist crimes evident in certain
societies must be eliminated through effective prosecution and swift
retribution. Freedom of speech must not be a license for propagation of racist
prejudice or religious intolerance.
Finally, as President Mbeki said
yesterday, racism has always been an instrument for the exploitation and
subjugation of other peoples. A central pillar of the struggle against racism is
to enable peoples to exercise their right of self-determination. Experience has
made it evident that suppression of this right is no longer an acceptable or
wise option. A new international and political endeavour is requested to inject
deeper and wider content into the right of self-determination in the modern
era.
We believe this conference can make a difference.
We must act
collectively to ensure action at the global level.
We must also commit
us to take action at home.
If we do what we should, the world will be a
better place for our peoples and for our children.
I thank
you.