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discriminatory exclusion of minorities in the strategies for the Sustainable
Development Goals.
34. An OHCHR position paper 22 published shortly after the adoption of the
Sustainable Development Goals misleadingly stated that “the new agenda includes
perhaps the most expansive list of groups to be given special focus of any
international document of its kind”. This is false, since it removes all references to
minorities, one of the world’s main marginalized groups that needed special focus
according to many studies on development and poverty.
35. Furthermore, the indicators to measure progress against the Goals, endorsed b y
the Statistical Commission, fell far short of meeting the ambition of the Goals and
targets in measuring the inclusion of marginalized and vulnerable groups, in particular
minorities, as had been recommended previously. While initially the Inter-Agency
and Expert Group on Sustainable Development Goal Indicators, which had been
tasked with creating the indicators, had expressed its commitment to disaggregation
by all the categories listed in the targets, the indicators were often either too vague or
restrictive. It was pointed out to the Special Rapporteur, for example, that in the case
of the indicator for target 10.2, while the spirit of the target was to “empower and
promote the social, economic and political inclusion of all, irrespective of age, sex,
disability, race, ethnicity, origin, religion or economic or other status”, the indicator
proposed to measure it did not even list five of the groups in the target, rendering it
meaningless. 23 In other words, again, the “leave no one behind” commitment
therefore excluded the type of data that was essential to measure the inclusion of
marginalized and vulnerable groups such as minorities, but also specifically
indigenous peoples and, in particular, highly vulnerable minorities such as
Afrodescendants and Roma. Ironically, the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, would a few years later call for the collection of
exactly the form of disaggregated data rejected in the indicator adopted for target 10.2
of the Goals. 24
C.
Obstacles to the equal participation of minorities in social and
economic development
36. Among the submissions to the Special Rapporteur for the present thematic
report, it was suggested that “leave no one behind” was the main clarion call
throughout the process of developing the Sustainable Development Goals. In part to
address the criticism that the Millennium Development Goals masked inequality
between groups, the new global Goals were to address this with their commitment
that all targets would be met “for all nations, all peoples and for all segments of
society”. 25 As the Special Rapporteur has often pointed out, the identification of the
extent to which minorities can effectively and equally participate in a State’s social
and economic development requires data that are disaggregated by age, sex, disability,
race, ethnicity, origin, religion or economic or other status.
__________________
22
23
24
25
10/22
See www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/MDGs/Post2015/HRAndPost2015.pdf.
Submission by Minority Rights Group and the Coalition for Religious Equality and Inclusive
Development.
The High Commissioner called for a “transformative agenda” to uproot systemic racism and
discrimination and detailed the “compounding inequalities” and “stark so cioeconomic and
political marginalization” that afflict people of African descent (see www.ohchr.org/EN/
NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=27218&LangID=E). She decried the lack of
comprehensive official disaggregated data regarding those minorities.
Submission by Minority Rights Group and the Coalition for Religious Equality and Inclusive
Development.
21-09902