Canada: UN expert group on people of African descent launches fact-finding mission
GENEVA (14 October 2016) – The United Nations Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent will undertake its
first official visit to Canada from 17 to 21 October 2016 to study the human rights situation of people of African
descent in the country, at the invitation of the Government.
“We will gather information on any forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, Afrophobia and related
intolerance, in order to assess the overall human rights situation of people of African descent in Canada,” said Ricardo
Sunga, who currently heads the expert group.
The Group’s delegation will travel to Ottawa, Toronto, Halifax and Montreal to meet representatives of the Government,
relevant communities, civil society organisations and individual African-Canadians working on issues of racism and
racial discrimination.
The delegation, which also includes human rights experts Michal Balcerzak and Ahmed Reid, will look into good practices
and gaps in protecting the human rights of people of African descent in Canada.
The experts will also promote the International Decade for People of African Descent*, which aims both to highlight the
contribution of people of African descent to societies and to strengthen national, regional and international
cooperation to ensure the human rights of people of African descent are respected, protected and fulfilled.
A press conference to share the delegation’s preliminary findings will be held on Friday 21 October at 14:00 in the
Charles Lynch Press Room, Room 130-S, Centre Block, Parliament Hill, Ottawa. Following its visit, the Working Group will
present a report containing its findings and recommendations to the UN Human Rights Council in September 2017.
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