DC STATEHOOD NOW PETITION
Introduction
September 25, 2006
Washington, D.C. is the capital of the richest country in the world,the United
States, which has fought many wars in the name of democracy. But the residents
of our nation's capital remain disenfranchised and undemocratically, unjustly
governed by Congress instead of enjoying the same democratic rights as every
other U.S.citizen. We do not have voting representation in Congress, yet Congress
holds veto power over our budget and legislation. Congress tells us how we can
and cannot spend our money. Congress imposed an appointed Financial Control
Board for five years, which until its termination in late 2001 usurped the already
limited power of our elected mayor and city council.
The Control Board and the corporate sector of the D.C. metropolitan
region, with support from Congress and the President, have advanced agenda strikingly
similar to the structural adjustment programs that the IMF and World Bank have
implemented around the world. In the name of promoting tourism and revitalizing
the city, they bestow massive tax breaks and land giveaways on corporations
while gutting or privatizing public services and resources and promoting gentrification.
These policies are still largely in place and as a result, income inequality
grew dramatically over the past twenty years to the highest in the nation, compared
to the fifty states.
Health statistics in D.C. are appalling, especially for the District's African
American population and the poor. D.C. suffers the highest rates of HIV infection
and AIDS cases per capita in the U.S., while Congress continues to block measures
to halt this epidemic. In addition to HIV/AIDS, the District leads the nation
in many chronic diseases -- such as asthma, diabetes, and hypertension -- all
of which can be substantially prevented or treated through improved primary
care. In the early 1990s the life expectancy for African American men was less
than 60 years. Newly released data for 1999 show little improvement with Black
men having a life expectancy at birth of 10 years below the national average,
and Black women 5 years below. The life expectancy for DC residents was lower
than any of the 50 states. Yet the Control Board closed the public hospital
that effectively served low- income residents, and no equivalent facility has
yet been opened to replace it.
On July 28, 2006, the U.N. Human Rights Committee found that
the District of Columbia's lack of voting representation in Congress violated
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a treaty ratified
by more than 160 countries including the United States. This ruling came as
a result of the initiative of Tim Cooper after over a decade of his tireless
efforts, focusing on this denial of District residents' political rights.
For these reasons the D.C. Statehood Green Party and Stand Up for Democracy
in D.C. Coalition offer the following petition to the U.N. Committee on Human
Rights and the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, both
Committees monitoring the compliance with treaties that the U.S. government
has signed and ratified.
Because of our support for the principle of universal human rights as outlined
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in our Petition we also refer to
other US human rights violations pertaining to other international Conventions
that are still not ratified by the US government.
We invite you to join us in our struggle to win democracy and human rights
in our nation's capital, by supporting this initiative by signing our Petition
and urging others to do the same.
CURRENT SIGNATURE COUNT:
1899
THE PETITION
We, the undersigned individuals and organizations from the United States and
from countries around the world, join in support of this petition to the U.N.
Human Rights Committee and the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
Whereas, the U.S. government, both executive and legislative branches,
continues to deny the residents of its capital, the District of Columbia, the
same political rights enjoyed by citizens of our nation's fifty states, namely
full voting representation in both houses of our national legislature, the U.S.
Congress, as well as legislative, budgetary, and judicial autonomy,
Whereas, these rights are outlined in the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights which the U.S. has ratified, which holds that every
citizen has the right to take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly
or through freely chosen representatives, to vote and to be elected according
to universal and equal suffrage, and to have access to public service on general
terms of equality,
Whereas, the rights to equality before the law and to political participation
in the national legislature are fundamental human rights under the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man (Articles 2 and 20),
Whereas, only statehood will give us self-determination on the same
terms of equality with other U.S. citizens, that is permanent legislative, budgetary
and judicial autonomy as a state, as well as full voting rights in the House
of Representatives and two voting Senators,
Whereas, the denial of our political rights is a racist assault on our
majority African American and Latino District population, as well as on minorities
throughout our nation, by precluding the possibility that our voting delegation
to Congress, including two Senators, would be people of color,
Whereas, this denial is a violation of the International Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
Whereas, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Articles 23, 25
and 26), and the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child outline each person's
right to housing, food, education, health care and a job at a living wage and
the right of each child to health and education respectively (see footnote),
Whereas, the U.N. Charter outlining the rights of Non-Self Governing
Territories, Article 73 requires colonial powers "to develop self-government,
to take due account of the political aspirations of the peoples, and to assist
them in the progressive development of their free political institutions, according
to the particular circumstances of each territory and its peoples and their
varying stages of advancement" (see footnotes).
Whereas, the continued denial of our political rights has facilitated
a longstanding denial of these economic and social rights, while the residents
of the District of Columbia continue to be subjected to corporate-driven neoliberal
Structural Adjustment programs which entail brutal and racist attacks on these
human rights by their erosion of democracy, privatization of municipal services
and property, cuts and inadequate funding of basic social services including
education, gentrification and lack of affordable housing for our working class
majority, toleration of persistent poverty of a large fraction of our children,
shockingly low life expectancy and an infant mortality rate that is significantly
higher than the national average for our African-American residents, destruction
of our only public hospital, the continued denial of quality medical care to
a large fraction of our residents, inadequate income security, the nation's
widest income gap between rich and poor, and the heavy weight of corporate financing
of our established political leaders corroding our democratic process,
Whereas, while our President and Department of State preaches the virtues
of democracy and human rights to the global community, the absence of voting
representation in Congress of the residents of our nation's capital is a virtually
unique denial of political rights of the residents of any national capital around
the globe,
Whereas, the just attainment of our political, social, and economic
human rights can only result from national and global solidarity with our local
struggles,
Whereas, the fulfillment of these rights would greatly encourage the
reciprocal solidarity of the residents of the District of Columbia, as well
as supporters of real democracy throughout our nation, with movements for peace
and global justice,
We the undersigned petitioners, the residents of the District
of Columbia, the people of the United States of America, and citizens of the
world, urgently request a full hearing by the U.N. Human Rights Committee and
U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination to consider the grievances
outlined in this petition and documented in supporting materials.
CURRENT SIGNATURE COUNT: 1899