A/HRC/49/46
E.
A neglected tool for conflict prevention: the missing minority rights
framework
58.
Since most contemporary conflicts are internal and usually involve grievances over
breaches of the human rights of minorities, logic would lead one to expect that early warning
measures would be privileged if conflict prevention were taken seriously as a matter of
priority. This does not seem to have been the case in recent years.
59.
The Independent Expert referred to a few hopeful signs in 2010, including that
Governments, donors and intergovernmental organizations would allocate significant
attention and resources to minority issues as sources of conflict; however, she admitted rather
generously that the picture in that regard was “mixed” at the time. 45
60.
She mentioned a number of initiatives, such as the establishment of the mandate of
the Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide, with an analysis framework to identify
threats to minority communities at an early stage, such as the demonization of minority
communities and indicators of broader significance to minorities, such as conflicts over land,
power, security and expressions of group identity, such as language, religion and culture, and
attacks on cultural and religious property and symbols, though admitted that there was a need
for additional tools that focused on chronic abuses of minority rights at the earliest stages, to
identify situations needing more upstream preventive action.46
61.
She also referred favourably to the 2005 World Summit Outcome, with States
Members of the United Nations accepting the responsibility to protect populations in relation
to preventing genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity, though
also added that a broader focus on minority rights protections as a tool for protection from
conflict would need to be the task of other mechanisms. 47
62.
She identified a number of United Nations offices and agencies, including the
Department of Political Affairs as the lead United Nations agency for conflict prevention and
peacemaking, the United Nations Inter-agency Framework for Coordination on Preventive
Action and the then Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery, as well as good practices
and initiatives in the field and other branches of the United Nations. She in particular spoke
highly of the UNDP publication Marginalised Minorities in Development Programming: A
UNDP Resource Guide and Toolkit, which included sections on early warning on minorities
and conflict, as well as integrating minorities into the UNDP programme cycle.48
63.
While she adopted a positive tone and acknowledged that some United Nations
country missions and field operations were more closely focused on identifying the early
warning signs of grievances and human rights breaches in their conflict prevention activities
than others, the Independent Expert often noted the absence of expertise on minority rights,
pointing out, for example, that the Department of Political Affairs had a focal point on
indigenous peoples, but not one on minorities. The standby team also did not include a
professional with comprehensive expertise on minority rights. 49
64.
Looking ahead, she emphasized that one of the earliest indicators of potential violence
was the chronic disregard of minority rights, that early warning systems must have the
expertise necessary to be alert to such indicators, and that it was necessary for early warning
mechanisms within the United Nations system to focus more strongly on minority rights. She
added, however, that despite some excellent practices in the field, there was no mechanism
for or consistent practice of ensuring that minority issues were mainstreamed across the incountry work of entities in the United Nations system. 50
65.
It appears that none of the recommendations that the Independent Expert made in
201051 was implemented by United Nations entities. Nor did the Special Rapporteur receive
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
Ibid., para. 65.
Ibid., para. 67.
Ibid., para. 68.
UNDP, Marginalised Minorities in Development Programming, pp. 141–147.
A/HRC/16/45, para. 69.
Ibid., para. 84.
Ibid., paras. 80–102.
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