“The United Nations taking
this issue up and giving it serious attention will really bring home to Chicago
and the United States that there are violations occurring here of human rights,
potentially, not just about a budget crisis,” said Sital Kalantry, the
University of Chicago law professor who filed the letter on behalf of the
Midwest Coalition for Human Rights. “(It’s) not just about closing schools to
save money, but you need to be concerned about the rights of children when you
close schools,” said Kalantry.
The letter argues the
closings violate the human right to equality and nondiscrimination by disproportionately
affecting African American students. About 40 percent of the district’s students are black,
but 80 percent of students impacted by this year’s historic number of school
closings are black.
“If a governmental body
can simply ignore the views of the people they claim to represent, the right to
participate in governmental affairs is meaningless,” the letter states.
Chicago human rights
activists have taken issues to the United Nations before, including the case of
former police commander Jon Burge, for torture that took place in Chicago
police custody.
The United Nations does
not have power to issue orders in the United States, but could investigate and issue
findings. Past reports have nudged public officials to act or to re-evaluate
their initial stance, Kalantry said. “We believe that reaching out to the U.N.
will draw international attention to this issue and hopefully encourage the
United States government to take action,” she said.
Chicago Public Schools had
no immediate response to the letter. Chicago’s City Council passed a resolution
in 2009 adopting the U.N.’s Convention on the Rights of the Child and ordering
all city agencies to advance policies consistent with it. In addition, in the 1960s the United States
ratified the U.N. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
U.N. International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination;
Kalantry says the nation is obliged to comply with those covenants.
Kalantry says she believes
the United Nations may have received correspondence about school closings from
parents or activists in other U.S. cities, but no other “letter of allegation”
has been made public, and the U.N. has not issued any public findings.
New Orleans, New York City,
Minneapolis, Kansas City, and Philadelphia have all closed dozens of schools in
recent years. The U.S. Department of Education under former Chicago schools CEO
Arne Duncan, has promoted
school closings as a way to move students to better performing schools.
In Chicago, federal and circuit court
cases challenging the school closings are pending. See
the “Letter of Allegation” below under “Files to Download.” Linda Lutton is an education reporter at WBEZ. Follow her @WBEZeducation.
Clarification: A previous version
of this article stated that “the U.N. does not have jurisdiction over the
United States,” which, semantically, could be debated.
Source: UN Asked to
Investigate Chicago School Closings | Conspiracy Theories 8/12/13, 2:51 PM July
24, 2013
http://beforeitsnews.com/conspiracy-theories/2013/07/un-asked-to-investigate-chicago-school-closings-2453306.html
Source: http://tinyurl.com/k5bxf2r AUGUST 12, 2013 2:49
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