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