United Nations
Human Rights Council
Second session of the Forum on Minority Issues
Palace of Nations, Geneva, 12th-13th November 2009
Theme 3: Barriers to the effective participation of the Amazigh population in public affairs
concerning them.
Mr or Mrs Chairperson, Ladies and Gentlemen,
We are happy to be participating in this Forum for the first time and to be able to give our
view on the crucial issue of the barriers that impede the Amazigh population from effectively
participating in public affairs concerning them.
We would firstly like to specify that the Amazigh people live throughout North Africa and the
Sahara. However, colonisation and other political and historical factors have led to an
Amazigh community of almost 4 million members currently living across Europe, principally
in France, Spain, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Whether they live throughout North Africa or Europe, the Amazigh are faced with the same
policies of concealment, denial and assimilation and of course non-recognition. As a result
of this, Amazigh populations struggle to make themselves visible and establish political
"weight", which excludes them from genuine and "effective" participation in political
decision making concerning them.
North African governments say that there are people with Amazigh backgrounds or language
within their administrations, Parliament and even government. This is true, however within
the State authorities the Amazighs are not able to exercise any freedom of expression or
freedom of action. Further, those who occupy political positions do not owe these positions
to their legitimacy as representative of their community, but rather to their ability to
guarantee or contribute to the established order, to give a democratic image of the
state regime and often to act as a conduit at the local level.
Furthermore, while no approved political party in North Africa defends the specific rights of
the Amazighs, laws prohibit the establishment of political parties on a linguistic or regional
basis. In reality, this aims at preventing the Amazighs from creating their own political
parties and from defending their interests. It is upon this basis that the Moroccan Amazigh
Democratic Party was prohibited in 2007 and that the Movement for the Liberation
of Kabylie was not authorized by Algerian authorities.
In Europe, governments also conceal Amazigh identity or even dilute it into a broader and
more consensual identity: Arab, Muslim, and Maghrebin. This deprives the Amazighs of the
necessary visibility to be listened to and to become eligible to participate in public affairs.