A/HRC/FMI/2021/1
Discussions
During the two-day session, participants will be invited to contribute to four panel
discussions under the general topic of “Conflict prevention and the protection of the
human rights of minorities”. Each panel discussion will be introduced briefly by a number
of experts and facilitated by a moderator, who will guide the discussion towards the
formulation of specific recommendations. Recommendations emanating from four
regional forums (the Americas, Africa and the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific, and
Europe) held in 2021 under the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues will
also be considered, in order to include greater regional input and views on the issues to be
discussed at the session.
Participants will be encouraged to make statements or comments, to answer questions
from the moderator and to suggest recommendations to be included in the outcome
document that the Special Rapporteur will present to the Human Rights Council at its
forty-ninth session.
2.
Root causes of contemporary conflicts involving minorities
States where promises of equality and universal human rights for minorities appear hollow
because of discriminatory or exclusionary practices are fertile ground for long-standing
grievances leading to frustration, resentment, anger and, eventually, violence. As the
groundbreaking joint United Nations and World Bank study of 2018 on Pathways for Peace:
Inclusive Approaches to Preventing Violent Conflict pointed out, the main drivers of
instability globally are group-based grievances around exclusion and injustice; in other
words, the root causes of most of today’s violent conflicts are usually intimately linked to
breaches of the human rights of minority communities.
A fresh look at these issues and the need to better address the grievances of minorities and
the protection of their human rights is necessary to give new impetus to a human rights system
with regard to the protection of certain minorities.
Grievances may fester beneath the surface for years, or even decades, before violent conflict
breaks out. Certain situations of systematic exclusion may escalate from chronic grievances
to violent conflict because of numerous factors, such as the denial of status to a minority
language, the denigration of a community’s identity or unequal participation in employment
or educational or public life, and exclusion from the equal benefits of economic and resource
allocation. Developing a capacity to identify the root causes of conflicts is crucial for States
and intergovernmental organizations.
Inspired by and building upon the report presented more than 10 years ago by the first
Independent Expert on minority issues, on minority rights and conflict revention
(A/HRC/16/45), and more recent developments, such as Pathways to Peace, the Forum will,
at the present session, reflect on identifying and addressing the root causes of conflicts
involving minorities. It will consider how early awareness of root causes involving State
policies and practices that disadvantage or exclude minorities can also be the most effective
means to prevent conflicts. Participants will focus on how to monitor risk factors. Lastly, the
Forum will explore the role of States, intergovernmental organizations, civil society and
minorities in tackling at an early stage the root causes that may be in breach of human rights
obligations, such as the right to equality and the prohibition of discrimination.
3.
Legal and institutional frameworks: the human rights of minorities and conflict
prevention
The Declaration on the Rights of Minorities states in its preamble that the implementation of
minority rights contributes to the stability of States. Since the Declaration was adopted in
1992, this assumption has since been developed in successive resolutions of the General
Assembly, the Commission on Human Rights and the Human Rights Council, in the reports
of the Secretary-General (see A/54/2000, paras. 202–203), outcome documents of a number
of conferences (see A/CONF.189/12 and Corr.1, chap. I), and policy processes.
2