A/HRC/28/77
58.
National human rights institutions or ombudsman’s offices should consider
establishing local offices or deploying staff to localities in which violence has taken place or
is ongoing in order to closely monitor and report on situations.
59.
Community and religious leaders should maintain inter-ethnic and interreligious
dialogue when violence has broken out in order to help end violence and initiate action to
protect minorities from continuing violence and possible atrocity crimes.
60.
Media should report impartially and objectively on ongoing violence against
minorities and conflict, using neutral language that does not aggravate tensions or increase
the exposure of minorities to further violence.
61.
As appropriate, non-governmental organizations and humanitarian actors should
deploy staff and resources to provide assistance to minorities affected by violence. In the
delivery of assistance, they should ensure that minorities participate in the formulation of
resulting humanitarian strategies and that their operations do not expose their staff or any
recipient of assistance to potential further violence.
3.
Recommendations to regional and international actors
62.
United Nations and regional human rights monitoring mechanisms should promptly
monitor deteriorating situations of violence, including systematic and widespread sexual and
gender-based violence, support initiatives in the area of humanitarian access and seek to
employ all procedural and diplomatic means at their disposal to rapidly contribute to ending
violence, for example by undertaking fact-finding missions to investigate atrocity crimes
that may have been committed.
63.
International and regional organizations should promptly assist States to engage in
conflict resolution and stabilization efforts. They should ensure that such efforts address
immediate protection concerns, as well as the structural causes of the conflict. International
and regional organizations should ensure minorities’ participation in the formulation of
resulting strategies for those efforts. Such inclusive approaches to consultation should also
include minority communities which have not taken up arms.
64.
The Human Rights Council, the special procedures, the Special Adviser of the
Secretary-General on the Prevention of Genocide and other relevant mechanisms should
consider ways of strengthening the processing, management and evaluation of information
about ongoing serious violations of minority rights and bringing information rapidly to the
attention of relevant United Nations decision-making bodies, including the General
Assembly and the Security Council.
65.
In upholding the responsibility to protect principle, a range of tools and measures
that do not involve the use of force are available to regional and international organizations.
They should be prioritized and used in a calibrated and targeted way to provide protection,
including targeted economic sanctions and travel bans on suspected perpetrators of mass
atrocities.
66.
In situations in which there is little domestic accountability, and in order to avoid
creating security vacuums that can leave minorities at heightened risk, international and
regional rapid-response accountability measures should be in place to reinforce domestic
accountability capacities. They should include measures to provide physical protection to
judges, lawyers and human rights defenders, and legal assistance to try cases involving
serious criminality as well as mass atrocities.
67.
As appropriate to the circumstances and the nature and extent of the violence being
perpetrated, and in conformity with international law and standards, including the principle
of the responsibility to protect, the international community should consider all means
necessary to end acts of violence targeted against minorities. While diplomatic, mediation
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