A/HRC/28/66
sometimes protection, including by following up on individual cases. The findings of civil
society organizations can also assume an early warning function, notably in volatile
situations.
73.
Moreover, in the face of violent aggression, civil society plays a major role in
overcoming a culture of silence wherever this exists. It is important for individuals and
groups targeted by incitement to religious hatred and violent attacks to experience solidarity
support and that others speak out on their behalf. Overcoming silence is likewise needed to
challenge the claims of perpetrators of hatred to act in the name of a “silent majority”.
Speaking out against such violence, and the broader political or religious dimensions
involved with these problems, can be dangerous. Therefore, local civil society
organizations may need international networks to defend them in situations where they are
threatened.28
74.
Different faith-based and secular civil society organizations work together and have
created common platforms. Beyond the pragmatic advantages of joining forces, such
cooperation also demonstrates that a commitment to human rights can create and strengthen
solidarity across all religious, cultural and philosophical divides. This is an important
message in itself. The Special Rapporteur has come across impressive examples in this
regard, for example, initiatives taken by Christian civil society organizations in support of
atheists or Buddhists under threat and public statements made by Bahá’í representatives
against the persecution of Shia Muslims. Such acts of solidarity have a highly symbolic
value.
4.
Contributions by the media
75.
While the media, including the Internet, are frequently used to stoke intergroup
hostilities by spreading false, biased or partisan information and hateful messages that
incite violence, they can also be harnessed to foster cross-boundary communication and
promote policies of tolerance, reconciliation and cooperation. In short, the media are a part
of the problem, but they must certainly be part of the solution.
76.
Hostile media campaigns can have disastrous effects on people’s mindset and in the
long run can undermine people’s common sense, creating a climate of confusion and
collective hysteria. The most important antidote to hostile media campaigns targeting
religious minorities or other groups is the diligent research of facts.
77.
Fact-finding may also include a public analysis of collective historical traumas.
Meaningful communication across boundaries requires the possibility that people can agree
— or at least partially agree — on important facts concerning intricate historic legacies. It
is no coincidence that reconciliation commissions usually also have the aspiration of “truth”
in their titles (typically being called “truth and reconciliation commissions”), because only
on the basis of agreeing on at least some elementary historic facts can communities tackle
traumatic historic legacies that otherwise would have the potential of tearing societies apart.
The “ghosts of the past” can only be put to rest by public debates based on a careful
research of facts. Here again, public discourse facilitated by a rich landscape of independent
and critical media has an important function.
78.
The media play an indispensable role in bringing about a culture of public discourse.
Where such a culture remains underdeveloped or even non-existent, prejudiced messages
against groups that face systematic discrimination usually find fertile ground, because
hostile rumours remain unchecked by factual evidence, and fearful narratives can hardly be
exposed to public scrutiny or counter-narratives. Positively speaking, a developed culture of
28
18
See www.ohchr.org/EN/issues/SRHRDefenders/.