Speaker: Thank you Mr Chairman, Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen as we commemorate
the landmark moment for the universal protection of minority rights we need to come to
terms with the fact that the declaration adopted 30 years ago has yet to fulfill its promise for
comprehensive and effective protection of minority rights and indeed our human rights. And
it's protection is essential to political and social stability as the preamble of the 1992
declaration states. Yet minorities around the world continue to face forced cultural or
linguistic assimilation. Its members are often victims of hate speech and remain
disproportionately affected by various forms of systemic oppression and group-based
discrimination. Democratic backsliding and the rise of authoritarian forms of populism have
also negatively impacted minority rights which 30 years ago emerged as distinctive of
democracies. Respecting rather than suppressing diversity. Such persistent vulnerabilities
are at the roots of enduring conflicts and relate to real gaps of effective implementation. As
an professor myself here at the [inaudible] and a member of the board of Omnium Cultural,
with approximately 190,000 members with mission of preserving Catalan culture and
language I often experience the stark contrast because, sorry, between what I teach to my
students and the lack of an effective protection of my own language and identity. Indeed in
Catalonia, a stateless nation with a distinctive history, culture and language have been
systematically denied or marginalized throughout history or relegated through a second
class toward the native constitutional status. Such persistent inequality has increased
Democratic support for self-determination as the only means to overcome group-based
inequality and enjoy the right of cultural and linguistic identity. Spain has confronted the
support through a securitization and criminalization approach that has involved targeting
democratic forms of political expression, legitimizing police violence and even massive
surveillance with Pegasus spyware of Catalan politicians, lawyers, journalists, and human
rights activists and pro independence leaders.