A/HRC/28/77
I. Introduction
1.
In accordance with Human Rights Council resolution 19/23, the present document
contains the recommendations of the Forum on Minority Issues. The seventh session was
held on 25 and 26 November 2014 and considered the theme of “Preventing and addressing
violence and atrocity crimes targeted against minorities”. The work of the Forum was
guided by the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, Rita Izsák. The Chair of the session
was Patrick Thornberry of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Some 570 participants attended, including representatives of Member States and numerous
representatives of minority communities, non-governmental organizations, United Nations
specialized agencies, regional and intergovernmental bodies and national human rights
institutions.
2.
The recommendations contained in the present document are based primarily on the
provisions of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic,
Religious and Linguistic Minorities. The Declaration sets out the fundamental international
human rights standards pertaining to the promotion and protection of minorities and
recognizes that minority rights protection contributes to political and social stability and the
strengthening of friendship and cooperation among peoples and States. The
recommendations are also based on other existing international and regional human rights
standards, principles and guidelines relevant to the promotion and protection of minority
rights, including the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide. The jurisprudence and general comments of different United Nations treaty
bodies and relevant reports and recommendations from special procedures mandate holders,
including the work of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, also informed the
recommendations.
3.
The recommendations take into account the principle of responsibility to protect and
the three pillars of that principle, notably: the State carries the primary responsibility for
protecting its populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against
humanity and from incitement to those crimes; the international community has the
responsibility to encourage and assist States in fulfilling that responsibility; and the
international community has the responsibility to use appropriate diplomatic, humanitarian
and other peaceful means to help to protect populations from atrocity crimes, as stipulated in
the 2005 World Summit Outcome (General Assembly resolution 60/1).
4.
The range of issues covered by the recommendations is not exhaustive. They are
action-oriented for use by a wide range of stakeholders to improve prevention and better
respond to violence targeted against minorities. It is hoped that the recommendations will be
interpreted in a constructive manner, in the light of binding human rights obligations, and in
a spirit of cooperation and open dialogue, and that they will be used to make appropriate and
informed choices when addressing and responding to violent situations affecting minorities.
5.
The recommendations are phrased in broad terms and seek to be implemented in
countries with diverse political, religious, historical and cultural backgrounds, with full
respect for universal human rights standards. A great variety of country and minority
situations exist and consequently, different measures may be required to prevent and address
violence and atrocity crimes targeted against minority groups within a given State.
Implementation of recommendations should be monitored and reviewed on a regular basis
to ensure that they achieve the required objectives. The Forum has consistently emphasized
that homogeneous solutions to different challenges are generally neither possible nor
desirable, and that the recommendations should therefore be used with that in mind. The
duty of States to protect their populations from violence and atrocity crimes, irrespective of
national, ethnic, religious, linguistic or other identity, transcends any specific State ideology,
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