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UN decries ‘structural racism’ in Brazil after black man’s killing
Nov 24, 2020
The UN said Tuesday the deadly beating of a black man by white guards in Brazil exemplified “structural racism”, and called for an independent investigation and urgent reforms in the country.
Ravina Shamdasani, a spokeswoman with the UN rights office, told reporters during a virtual briefing in Geneva that his killing was “an extreme but sadly all too common example of the violence suffered by Black people in Brazil.”
“It offers a stark illustration of the persistent structural discrimination and racism people of African descent face,” she said.
She said government officials had a responsibility to acknowledge the underlying problem of persisting racism as the first essential step towards solving it.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has downplayed structural racism in Brazil, where around 55 percent of its population of 212 million identifies as black or mixed-race.
Bolsonaro has insisted he himself is “colour blind”, while his vice president Hamilton Mourao also caused an outcry Friday when he said “there is no racism” in Brazil.
Shamdasani, however, insisted that “structural racism, discrimination and violence people of African descent face in Brazil is documented by official data.”
She pointed to statistics showing that “the number of Afro-Brazilian victims of homicide is disproportionately higher than other groups.
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