ARMENIA
19 November 2020
Human Rights Council
Forum on Minority Issues, 13th session: Hate Speech, Social Media and Minorities
Panel Discussion: Causes, scale and impact of hate speech targeting minorities on social
media
Delivered by Mrs. Zoya Stepanyan, Second Secretary, Permanent Mission of Armenia to the
UN Office and other International Organisations in Geneva.
Thank you, Chairperson.
Armenia thanks the distinguished speakers for their insightful remarks that set the
scene for this discussion.
Targeting minorities on social media is one of the most acute challenges that the
international community faces these days. If twenty years ago a genocide could
have been provoked through blaming a minority on radio and TV, in our days we
witness incitement to this horrendous crime unfolding through the conduits of
social networks.
It, however, can never happen without a tacit or direct participation of a
Government. Armenia is gravely concerned that the high-level officials of Turkey
commonly use such insults as the ‘Leftovers of the sword,’ referring to the
Genocide of Armenians and other Christian communities. The leadership of
Azerbaijan has adopted a similar derogatory stance occasionally calling
Armenians “dogs who should be chased.” This happens in a country that alleges
itself to have a multicultural society.
These kind of messages were not singular emotional outbursts but a constant
motif of the Turkish and Azerbaijani Government’s policies, widely disseminated
on social networks, including through numerous troll farms. Such concerted
advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred is an early warning sign of
organized and systematic violence to come, within and outside their countries,
which we actually witnessed during the recent aggression of Azerbaijan against
Nagorno-Karabakh.
Early detection and denouncement of egregious use of the hate speech can
certainly contribute to the prevention of gross violations of human rights. The UN
human rights pillar can play a key role in this regard.