A/HRC/34/68 linguistically and economically accessible and that special measures are taken, where necessary, to ensure that marginalized groups and vulnerable persons are able to benefit from such procedures in an equitable and just manner. 107. Where appropriate, the transfer of land rights to family members should be facilitated, in particular to allow women surviving a conflict or a disaster to reclaim the property of their husband or families or to reclaim a property if titles and documents have been lost during a crisis. Similarly, where land or property title documents have been lost, legal assistance measures should be made available to assist minorities in making their claims. 108. States should ensure that minorities recovering from a crisis are able to enjoy their political rights, in particular their right to vote and to stand for election. 109. States should ensure that minorities recovering from a crisis are able to exercise their freedom of religion by guaranteeing their access to places of worship. 110. States should plan and carry out appropriate and meaningful consultation with minorities affected by crises and make available a complaint mechanism for minorities to seek an effective remedy in situations where they think they may have been discriminated against at any stage of the delivery of humanitarian assistance or they may not have received the support or protection to which they are entitled. States should ensure that minorities do not suffer reprisals for seeking remedy. 111. The United Nations, in collaboration with national human rights institutions and others, should provide technical assistance in respect of complaint mechanisms that can be safely accessed by persons belonging to minorities to enable them to voice their concerns regarding relief and recovering efforts. Organizations or individuals responsible for human rights violations, including acts of discrimination or neglect, must be held accountable. Organizations should ensure timely and thorough reporting of their activities to foster transparency and accountability for their actions. Minority communities and local nongovernmental organizations should engage with accountability and quality standards for humanitarian assistance in order to better hold humanitarian actors accountable. 112. The United Nations and other international humanitarian and development actors should carry out a transparent evaluation of their programmes, with the participation of minority communities, with a view to drawing lessons learned to feed into planning for future operations. Building fair and inclusive societies 113. States, the United Nations and other development and humanitarian actors should engage as early as possible with support programmes specifically designed for minorities in post-crisis situations and with projects to promote community cohesion. 114. The United Nations should ensure that development and humanitarian partners, taking account of the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants of September 2016, move rapidly beyond the emergency response phase and ensure that minorities are not discriminated against and are fully included and consulted in post-crisis development and redevelopment programmes. 115. Minorities should be fully involved in peacebuilding and transitional justice processes aimed at creating stability and avoiding future crises. Peace agreements and justice processes, including truth commissions, criminal prosecutions, reparations for victims and institutional reforms, must adopt a minority rights-based approach in order to ensure the rights of minorities and promote coherent and inclusive societies. Minority rights-based approaches should also be applied to national reconstruction and rehabilitation efforts after a disaster. 17

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