A/HRC/34/68
Standing Committee (IASC) Operational Framework on Accountability to Affected
Populations; IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons
(April 2010); Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
Working with National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities and Indigenous
Peoples in Forced Displacement (2011); UNHCR, A Community-based Approach in
UNHCR Operations (January 2008); United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
Marginalised Minorities in Development Programming: A UNDP Resource Guide and
Toolkit (2010); UNHCR, “Protection of refugees who belong to minorities”, Pamphlet No.
12 (2011); People in Aid, “Code of good practice in the management and support of aid
personnel” (2003); Groupe Urgence Réhabilitation Développement, Quality COMPAS
Companion Book (2009); UNHCR, Global Action Plan to End Statelessness: 2014-2024
(2014); Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Human Rights of Migrants,
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Persons: Norms and Standards of the Inter-American Human Rights System (2015); and
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development/Development Assistance
Committee, Principles for Evaluation of Development Assistance (1991).
6.
The recommendations build on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, in
particular with regard to ensuring that all human beings are able to fulfil their potential in
dignity and equality and in a healthy environment, and the commitment to foster peaceful,
just and inclusive societies which are free from fear and violence. 3 In this respect, they
contribute to the implementation of the 2016 World Humanitarian Summit commitment to
action, “Transcending humanitarian development divides — Changing people’s lives: from
delivering aid to ending need”.4
7.
The recommendations highlight the primary responsibility of States to protect the
rights of minorities and to contribute continually to building resilient and prepared minority
communities that are able to actively respond when crises strike, and to provide timely and
appropriate assistance relevant to the specific needs of minority communities in times of
crisis. Meeting these responsibilities requires, inter alia, comprehensive crisis and
contingency planning with effective and meaningful participation of minorities. In this
respect, the recommendations are also addressed to United Nations entities, which are
primary actors in the delivery of humanitarian assistance, and other international and
locally based humanitarian actors, regional organizations, non-governmental organizations,
minority groups and other non-State actors.
8.
The recommendations address a wide range of crisis situations, some of which will
affect not only minorities but the broader population also. While a rights-based approach to
the delivery of humanitarian aid should be applied to all persons affected by a crisis, the
particular aim of the present recommendations is to ensure that minorities, as particularly
vulnerable groups, are not further marginalized or discriminated against before, during or
after a conflict, disaster, pandemic or other humanitarian crisis. It should also be noted that
some humanitarian crises may go unnoticed or may not be qualified as a humanitarian crisis
by a government. Indeed, the denial by a State of such a situation can itself constitute an act
of discrimination that unjustifiably delays urgent intervention and assistance by the State as
well as by international actors.
9.
Minorities are often disproportionately affected by humanitarian crises such as
violence due to a conflict or damage and destruction caused by natural or man-made
disasters. They are sometimes directly targeted by States or armed groups during a conflict,
3
4
See General Assembly resolution 70/1, preamble.
See https://undg.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Transcending-humanitarian-developmentdivides.pdf.
3