A/HRC/43/48/Add.1
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and also that it does not violate women’s rights to
access services such as health care.
67.
Other civil society-led initiatives aimed at tackling the above-mentioned issues
include programmes that foster safe spaces for worship and that raise awareness about and
strive to combat discrimination. However, much more needs to be done to build more
resilient, inclusive communities where individuals, particularly members of newer
communities, are afforded equal protections for their human rights.
VI. Conclusions
68.
The Netherlands possesses the requisite legal and policy framework for
promoting and protecting the enjoyment by all persons of the right to freedom of
thought, conscience, and religion or belief. The Government’s investments in
strategies and programmes for monitoring, reporting and responding to developments
that undermine the equal enjoyment of this right have been extensive and laudable. A
good example is the National Action Programme for Anti-Discrimination, which is
designed to combat all forms of discrimination. Political expediency, however, risks
undermining the substantial framework already in place to address these issues. The
core challenges facing the Government as it grapples with the ongoing development of
a multi-ethnic society are both familiar and new. Unlike the country’s responses to the
challenges engendered by society’s diversification in earlier periods, however, the
Netherlands is in the process of tackling discrimination by building an inclusive,
rather than segregated, society capable of accommodating all persons, regardless of
the religions, ideologies or beliefs they may hold.
69.
Such an endeavour is bound to be arduous and slow, and consequently,
intolerance and discrimination against religious and ethnic minorities will continue to
be a feature of that process in years to come in the Netherlands. These circumstances
threaten social cohesion and are provoking increasingly myopic responses that
threaten to undermine the protections for freedom of religion or belief historically
enjoyed by the Dutch people, as well as a range of other human rights on which this
right depends for its full enjoyment. Long-established religious communities,
including Jewish and Muslim communities, are concerned about proposed legislation
and policy that seek to intervene in their affairs, and about narratives that appear to
incite hostility and discrimination against them.
70.
The Government appears to be quite cognizant and reflective about many of
the issues of concern outlined in this report which have, no doubt, contributed to their
proactive practices. Initiatives aimed at addressing these concerns have not yet
generated the desired comprehensive, systematic change within society, but efforts to
strengthen the capacity of frontline defenders, including the police, social workers,
human rights defenders, lawyers, doctors and teachers, to foster environments where
human rights principles can be promoted and respected, should continue to be
supported.
VII. Recommendations
71.
The Special Rapporteur notes that a human rights-based approach to
addressing the challenges facing the Netherlands, including the need to combat
intolerance and discrimination based on religion or belief, is necessary in order to
avoid the setbacks that security-based or populist responses to tensions between
diverse communities often beget. In this regard, the Special Rapporteur recommends
that Government officials continue to be inclusive in their efforts to promote “Dutch”
values, especially where those efforts give rise to policies or initiatives that may impact
human right protections. Attempts to integrate members of newer communities
should strive to respect the right of persons to enjoy the right to freedom of religion or
belief, and authorities should also be mindful of the fact that discrimination against
persons on this basis ostensibly perpetuates coercive environments incapable of
fostering social cohesion and respect for human rights principles.
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