and  Conflict,  to  continue  its  commendable  efforts  in  promoting  the  interethnic,  inter-­‐ communal  and  inter-­‐religious  harmony  (from  Botswana).       Sudan       Sudan  received  5  recommendations  and  accepted  all.     It  accepted:  to  incorporate  robust  provisions  for  the  protection  of  human  rights  in  the   new  Constitution,  including  articles  on  the  prevention  of  discrimination  and  protection   of  minorities  (from  Canada),  to  draft  the  Constitution  in  an  inclusive  process  with  the   participation  of  civil  society,  women  and  minorities,  to  ensure  to  include  a  catalogue  of   human  rights,  in  particular  the  freedom  of  speech  and  assembly,  and  to  take  the   multiethnic  and  multireligious  background  of  their  population  into  account  (from   Austria).  It  accepted  to  clearly  voice  its  intention  to  guarantee  the  protection  of  ethnic   and  religious  minorities  and  formalize  post-­‐referendum  agreements  on  citizenship  rights   which  will  safeguard  civil,  political,  economic,  social  and  cultural  rights  on  an  equal   footing  as  citizens  (from  Finland)  and  to  foresee  measures  that  would  guarantee  the   right  to  the  freedom  of  religions  to  groups  that  will  become  minorities  after  the  birth  of   the  new  State,  namely  non-­‐Muslims  in  Sudan  (from  Somalia  and  from  Djibouti). Tanzania       Tanzania  received  6  recommendations  and  accepted  all.  With  one  exception,  they  were   all  made  regarding  persons  with  albinism8. It  accepted  to  continue  to  work  towards  protecting  and  promoting  the  rights  of   marginalized  and  vulnerable  population  (from  Nepal).  It  accepted  to  strengthen  efforts   to  ensure  full  and  complete  protection  and  the  protection  of  the  rights  of  all  peoples   with  Albinism  (from  Namibia  and  Djibouti)  and  to  consider  strengthening  efforts  to  put  a   halt  to  incidents  of  killings of  persons  with  albinism  (from  Brazil).  It  accepted  to  launch  a   nationwide  education  and  human  rights  awareness  campaign  to  prevent  stigmatization   of  persons  with  albinism  to  ensure  their  security  and  facilitate  their  equal  access  to   education  and  employment  (from  Canada  and  Uganda).                                                                                                                   8  While  the  Special  Rapporteur  is  on  the  view  that  persons  with  albinism  do  not  constitute  a  minority   group  according  to  the  UN  Declaration  on  the  Rights  of  People  belonging  to  National  or  Ethnic,  Religious   and  Linguistic  Minorities,  given  their  similar  experience  of  exclusion,  marginalization  and  discrimination  to   racial  minorities  and  that  these  recommendations  are  currently  labelled  under  ”minorities”  in  the  UPR-­‐ Info  database,  the  Special  Rapporteur  decided  to  include  these  recommendations  to  the  analysis  too.     36  

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