A/HRC/46/57
become vehicles or a fertile ecosystem for incitement to genocide or advocacy that constitutes
incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence. The above-mentioned compendium on the
global regulation of online hate suggests that social media platforms are often not subject to
such consequences and penalties.
49.
The Special Rapporteur has been advised of the more recent steps of some platform
owners to respond to messages that may constitute incitement to hate or harm, such as the
recent suspension by Amazon of the Parler platform from its web hosting services because
of Parler’s failure to moderate and remove violent content.
50.
The Special Rapporteur also notes and welcomes the setting up of an oversight board
of independent members, which will make final and binding decisions on the content that
Facebook and Instagram should allow or remove, on the basis of respect for freedom of
expression and the human rights obligations to remove any incitement to genocide or
advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination,
hostility or violence.
51.
However, a point which is repeatedly raised in submissions is that much of the
legislation and other measures to address hate speech in social media are too vague or weak,
or are insufficient. The scourge of hate speech and the harm and violence that it fuels are not
only continuing, but intensifying and threatening to destabilise societies, as illustrated by
recent attacks on the United States Capitol and the German Reichstag.
D.
Permissible restrictions on freedom of expression to prevent harm
52.
As the Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression emphasized in his 2019 report
(A/74/486, para. 26), and is widely acknowledged in the jurisprudence of international human
rights bodies, content might for many be offensive, controversial, unpopular or disturbing,
but freedom of expression protects the right to express such information and ideas.
Minorities, in particular, can be the object of extremely widespread expression that may be
offensive, intolerant and even racist: whether Governments should prohibit any such forms
of expression, or at what threshold of severity or ugliness a Government would be entitled to
restrict freedom of expression, are matters for debate. Nevertheless, as a matter of
fundamental principle, restrictions on any form of expression must remain an exception,
allowable only in cases that fall into one of three categories acknowledged in international
human rights law, as outlined below.
53.
On the basis of previous reports – such as the 2019 report of the Special Rapporteur
on freedom of expression, the 2015 report of the preceding Special Rapporteur on minority
issues (A/HRC/28/64), and others too numerous to enumerate – it is possible to identify the
exceptional contexts in which freedom of expression may be restricted. In international
human rights law, as enshrined in articles 19 and 20 of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (and repeated, broadly speaking, in other human rights treaties) and in
the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, there are three
strictly delimited contexts in which freedom of expression may be restricted:
(a)
States must criminalize expression that constitutes incitement to genocide; 8
(b)
States have an obligation to prohibit by law, though not necessarily to
criminalize, any advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to
discrimination, hostility or violence; 9
(c)
States may further restrict the exercise of the right to freedom of expression
only as provided by law and as necessary for respect of the rights or reputations of others or
for the protection of national security, public order, or public health or morals. 10
8
9
10
Under art. III (c) of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,
“direct and public incitement to commit genocide” is punishable.
Covenant, art. 20 (2).
Ibid., art. 19 (3).
9