A/HRC/22/51
in practice they are still exposed to religious instruction that may go against their
convictions.24
(f)
Publicly stoked prejudices
47.
Rather than combating existing prejudices against religious minorities, Governments
and public officials at times even stoke and exploit prejudices for political purposes, such as
fostering national homogeneity or blaming political failures on scapegoats. In this context,
minorities have been negatively portrayed as undermining the moral fabric of society. For
instance, minorities who tend to refuse military service on conscientious grounds have been
held responsible for military defeats and other national traumas. Surprisingly often, stoked
political paranoia targets small groups of people who are demonized as wielding some
mysteriously “infectious” power by which they allegedly pose a fatal threat to societal
cohesion.25 There are also examples of religious minorities being stigmatized by politicians
or radio hosts as “a fifth column” 26 who supposedly act in the interest of hostile foreign
powers, thus violating the interest of the nation. The spread of negative stereotypes and
prejudices obviously poisons the relationship between different communities and puts
people belonging to religious minorities in a vulnerable situation. Unfortunately,
stigmatizing prejudices also continue to exist in schoolbooks and teaching material for
children who, given their tender age, can easily be impressed by anti-minority propaganda.
(g)
Acts of vandalism and desecration
48.
There are many incidents of vandalism directed against symbols, sites or institutions
of religious minorities, including the demolition of places of worship 27 and the desecration
of cemeteries28 or tombs of historical and cultural heritage value. 29 Such attacks often
constitute symbolic violence by which the perpetrators aim to send a message to members
of religious minorities that they are not welcome in the community or country.30 This can
become a trigger for physical violence, 31 including expulsions and other extreme
manifestations of hostility. There are also numerous incidents where development or
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
14
See country visit report on Cyprus (A/HRC/22/51/Add.1, para. 62).
In Saudi Arabia, the Imam of Riyadh mosque allegedly called Shi’as “traitors” and called for the
elimination of all Shi’a believers in the world, including those residing in Saudi Arabia
(A/HRC/16/53/Add.1, paras. 362-366).
In the United States of America, a radio host reportedly said during his talk show “that Muslims in
this country are a fifth column. […] The reason they are here is to take over our culture and
eventually take over our country” (E/CN.4/2005/61/Add.1, para. 298).
In the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, the Tiferet Israel Synagogue in Caracas was vandalized with
anti-Semitic graffiti twice in January 2009 (A/HRC/13/40/Add.1, paras. 248-258).
Israeli State authorities allowed the construction of a museum on a portion of the Ma’man Allah
cemetery in Jerusalem that reportedly involved the excavation or exposure of hundreds of graves
where there has been a Muslim burial ground for more than 1,000 years (A/HRC/16/53/Add.1, paras.
206-215).
In press statements issued in 2012, the Special Rapporteur referred to the destruction and desecration
of religious sites and cemeteries in Cyprus
(www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=12042&LangID=E), Mali
(www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=12337&LangID=E) and Libya
(www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=12485&LangID=E).
In Greece, unknown persons reportedly nailed a pig’s head to the entrance door of a mosque in
Western Thrace (A/HRC/18/51, p. 85).
In Egypt, a bomb attack targeted Coptic Christian worshippers who had emerged from a New Year’s
mass in the Al-Qiddissin Church in Alexandria, killing 23 Coptic Christians and injuring at least 97
others (A/HRC/18/51, p. 29).