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Mauritania Urged to End Slavery Practices |
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INDEPENDENT UN EXPERT URGES MAURITANIA TO DO MORE TO END SLAVERY PRACTICES
New York, Nov 4 2009 10:10AM
While noting the significant steps that have been taken in Mauritania to tackle slavery, an independent United Nations human rights expert today called for a comprehensive strategy to put an end to this scourge, warning of its impact on the country’s future.
“Unaddressed,
slavery in all its forms may be an obstacle to the
stability, sustainable development and prosperity of
Mauritania,” (http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=9596&LangID=e)
said Gulnara Shahinian, the UN Special Rapporteur on
contemporary forms of slavery, at the end of her visit to
the country.
During her visit, Ms. Shahinian met
with various Government authorities, international
organizations and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and
visited communities in Atar, Rosso and the capital,
Nouakchott.
She met with people who told her that
they had been victims of slavery practices such as serfdom
and domestic servitude.
“These victims said
that they were utterly deprived of their basic human
rights,” she said in a news release. “Having no
alternative, they voluntarily stay or after fleeing, return
back to slavery. This perpetuates the vicious circle of
slavery for men, women and children. The women I met felt
that they were the most vulnerable as they suffer triple
discrimination firstly as women, secondly, as mothers and
thirdly as slaves.”
She commended the country
for taking legal measures to eradicate all forms of slavery,
including the passing in 2007 of the law criminalizing the
phenomenon, which she said sends “a clear message that
slavery can never be tolerated in Mauritania.”
She recommended that a sustained awareness-raising
campaign be carried out in the urban and rural areas to make
all Mauritanians aware of the law. In addition, to encourage
victims to come forward, she suggested that the slavery law
include provisions that offer victim assistance and
socio-economic programmes for their reintegration into
society.
“A comprehensive and holistic national
strategy
specifically addressing slavery that includes awareness
raising, access to basic services and income-generating
activities is required in order to effectively put an end to
this phenomenon,” said the Special Rapporteur.
Ms. Shahinian, who was appointed to her post in May
2008, works in an independent and unpaid capacity, and
reports to the Geneva-based Human Rights Council.
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