Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran
to the United Nations Office and other international
organizations in Geneva
بسم هللا الرحمن الرحیم
Statement
By
Seyed Mohammad Sadati Nejad
Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Before
13th Session of the Forum on Minorities
First thematic panel discussion
Causes, scale and impact of hate speech targeting minorities in social media
Geneva, 19 November 2020
Madam President
The mounting number of attacks on migrants and minorities, in particular
Muslim minorities, in some western countries has raised deep concerns about the
connection between inflammatory hate speeches online and violent acts.
There is a grave concern that the response to the hate speech by the social
media platforms has been uneven, selective, double-standard and discriminatory.
The task of deciding what and how to censor has largely fallen to the handful of
private corporations that control the social platforms and is mostly in line with
their business interests resulting in increasing violence against Muslims and
specific groups and entities and also mis-use of these platforms by terrorist and
criminal groups.
These companies, on one hand, are constrained and dominated by the
domestic laws of certain States and act in line with their interests, and on the
other hand are can serve to defuse discrimination and head off violence against
migrants and minorities.
Much of the world now communicates on social media, with nearly a third
of the world’s population active on Facebook alone. As more and more people
have moved online, experts say, individuals inclined toward racism or
islamophobia have found niches that can reinforce their views and goad them to
violence. Social media platforms and the way they are controlled, also offer
violent actors the opportunity to publicize their acts and disseminate their hate
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