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9.
To this end, OHCHR organized in 2007 several meetings of the Inter-Agency Working
Group on Minorities, comprising OHCHR, the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees, the United Nations Children’s Fund, UNDP, the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs,
the United Nations Institute for Training and Research, the International Labour Organization
(ILO), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and the World Health
Organization, bodies interested in strengthening cooperation on minority issues. In 2007, the
Group agreed that improved protection for minorities was timely and that existing human rights
mechanisms provided protection but needed to be used more effectively, noting the importance
of integrating minority issues into common country strategies and processes aimed at realizing
the Millennium Development Goals. In addition, the Group held a meeting with seven relevant
special procedures mandate-holders and discussed key challenges for the protection and
promotion of the rights of minorities in their respective areas of expertise. OHCHR will
strengthen further the work of the Group through closer partnerships and cooperation with
United Nations agencies and programmes as part of its strategy to mainstream minority rights
throughout the United Nations system and promote awareness about the Declaration on the
Rights of Minorities. OHCHR is also engaged in bilateral inter-agency cooperation, for example,
in the preparation of the UNDP resource guide on minorities.
C. Building thematic expertise
10. With a view to offering guidance for technical assistance, and pursuant to paragraph 74 (a)
of the Durban Programme of Action, which urged States and invited non-governmental
organizations and the private sector to create and implement policies that promote a high-quality
and diverse police force free from racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance, and recruit actively all groups, including minorities, into public employment,
including the police force and other agencies within the criminal justice system, such as
prosecutors, OHCHR, in cooperation with ILO, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
and the independent expert on minority issues, held an expert meeting on integration with
diversity in policing in Vienna on 15 and 16 January 2008, hosted by the Government of Austria.
11. OHCHR invited 10 senior professionals from the police services from different regions
and countries (Brazil, Cameroon, Canada, Hungary, India, Ireland, Nigeria, Pakistan, Samoa and
South Africa) to participate in the meeting as experts and deliver presentations focused on
sharing good experiences and lessons learned in relation to inclusion with diversity in policing.
An additional 16 participants represented other United Nations bodies, regional
intergovernmental organizations and civil society. Besides the sharing of experiences and lessons
learned, the main objective of the meeting was to determine whether it would be useful to
develop an OHCHR guidance note on the practical application of human rights principles and
provisions related to integration with diversity. A draft of the guidance note was reviewed and
discussed during the meeting. The meeting participants agreed that it would be useful to produce
guidelines on integration with diversity in policing, based on the current draft. OHCHR
subsequently commissioned the preparation of guidelines and good practice for policing with
diversity, which will be available in the near future and provide practical guidance and examples