DAKAR, July 22 (Xinhua) -- The proposed European Union immigration and
asylum pact has taken an "extremely xenophobic discourse," Doudou Diene, the
United Nations special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism and racial
discrimination, has said.
The Senegal-born Diene, who also oversees UN actions against xenophobia and
related intolerance, was quoted as saying that the proposed policy was in
violation of "all civil rights," the official Senegalese News Agency (APS)
reported Monday.
"The so-called shameful directive is the result of the identity crisis that
is facing European political parties and which has pushed them to adopt a
xenophobic discourse that criminalizes extra-European diversity," said the UN
official in remarks that were also publicized by the Spanish media.
In his remarks, the international civil servant of Senegalese nationality
welcomed what he described as "the unanimous rejection of this directive by
Latin American countries, including members of Mercosur: Argentina, Brazil,
Paraguay, Uruguay and Venezuela."
"This is the right answer as it is marked by defending the dignity of
millions of South Americans who have immigrated to Europe," said the
Senegalese-born Diene, who praised the unity of purpose among Latin American
states.
The United Nations rapporteur underscored that, judging from the new
directive, Europe was in an "identity crisis" because "its political and
intellectual elite are defending national identity against immigrants, against
foreigners, against diversity, while the streets are multicultural,
intercultural."
According to the UN official, "Europe has been so concentrated in the
construction of its economic union that it has forgotten that its new identity,
which is necessarily diverse, as is the current European and plural identity, is
a permanent feature of its construction."
Moreover, the Senegalese explained that the ongoing "fight against
terrorism has strengthened the crisis of European identity" because "the image
of a terrorist is seen in the other person."
In addition, Diene also found the existence of political speeches
denouncing diversity and the refusal to consider Turkey as an integral part of
Europe as "most absurd."
This was more so at a time when the country "can be allowed to be European
in terms of football or NATO," said the Senegalese national, adding that it is
because "there are those who still think that Europe is Christian."
While acknowledging that racism exists everywhere in the world, Diene
however argued that in Europe it is a form of "political expression" and only
two countries, Britain and Denmark, could be regarded as "advanced in the
rejection of xenophobia."