OPENING REMARKS
Mr Joshua Castellino, Chair of the eighth session of the Forum on Minority
Issues
1. Excellencies, Distinguished colleagues and experts, Representatives of
civil society, Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to offer a few thoughts
on the challenges faced by minorities within the criminal justice system.
2. We meet at a critical time, in the battle for peace, security, and human
rights. The events of the last few years have made multitudes among us,
extremely insecure, leaving trails of victims all over the world in Ankara,
Bamako, Beirut, Nairobi, Kobane, Mumbai, Lahore and Paris. Unlike the
scourge of Ebola that wiped out communities in the last years, and the
threat of climate change, that is impending for future generations, there
is a belief, that perpetrators of the kind of violence we have seen, can be
tackled through strong policing and security measures, with an
accompanying criminal justice system.
3. There is unanimity, in the need for criminal justice systems to be robust
and fair, as a means to punish criminals, and those who threaten the
lives and livelihoods of all. Such systems, when well designed generate
order and security, provide guarantees to society that perpetrators of
crime will be punished, and understand the need for the rehabilitation of
offenders. The best criminal justice systems are coherent in design and
organization, are built on fundamental principles of non-discrimination
and fairness, with a clear motivation to protect the inherent dignity and
worth of all: victims, witnesses, perpetrators, and various stakeholders
in the system. The best criminal justice systems pay heed to the need for
alternatives to incarceration, and seek active rehabilitation for
perpetrators of crime, while serving to reassure victims that impunity
will not be tolerated, even when crimes are committed by the powerful.
4. All the religions and cultures, well represented in the rich collection of
diversity in this room, share a common belief in the importance of
objectivity in the framing and dispensation justice. It is not by accident
that principles such the equality of all before the law, or that no one
ought to be above the law, are consistent threads in States across the
globe. Among the commonalities we share is also a belief that justice
systems need to be blind to the personal identity of those that come
before them. They serve the dual purpose of reassuring residents that
they can live their lives unmolested by its apparatus, while acting as a
deterrent to those considering engaging in criminal activities, to prevent
actions that violate the rights and freedoms of all.
5. Yet, despite the existence of these universal principles and beliefs, often
well represented in our laws, reports consistently show that minority
communities across the world, tend to reflect poorly in the criminal
justice mechanisms they are subject to. In a majority of States,