A/HRC/40/64
I. Introduction
1.
The mandate of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues was established by the
Commission on Human Rights in its resolution 2005/79 of 21 April 2005. It was
subsequently extended by the Human Rights Council in successive resolutions, the most
recent being resolution 34/6, which extended the mandate under the same terms as provided
for in resolution 25/5.
2.
The Special Rapporteur, Fernand de Varennes, was appointed by the Council on 26
June 2017 and assumed his functions on 1 August 2017. His term in office may be renewed
for two three-year periods.
3.
The Special Rapporteur is honoured to be entrusted with the mandate and thanks the
Council for its trust in him. He also wishes to thank the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) for its support in the implementation of the
mandate.
4.
The present report is the second submitted by the Special Rapporteur to the Human
Rights Council. In section II of the report, the Special Rapporteur provides an overview of
his activities in 2018, including an update on the Forum on Minority Issues. In section III,
he provides an update on the topic of statelessness as a minority issue, which was covered
in his first thematic report. In section IV, he highlights the significance of raising awareness
and the visibility of minority issues. In section V, he refers to the development of a new
tool to increase accessibility to and visibility of the recommendations and other
documentation emanating from the Forum on Minority Issues. The final section of the
report contains conclusions and insights on the Special Rapporteur’s mandate.
II. Activities of the Special Rapporteur
5.
The Special Rapporteur wishes to draw the attention of the Council to the
information published on the mandate’s website, which provides general information on the
activities associated with the mandate, including communications, press statements, public
appearances, country visits and thematic reports. 1
6.
The first full year of the Special Rapporteur’s mandate has been focused on
increasing the visibility and raising awareness of minority issues, both within United
Nations institutions and more generally with members of the greater public and other
regional and international organizations, and of exploring new approaches in order to
improve the accessibility of the mandate’s activities such as the Forum on Minority Issues.
7.
The human rights of minorities are not always sufficiently acknowledged or
prominent in many areas, including statelessness. This can be seen when, within the United
Nations, groups such as the Rohingya – a religious, ethnic and linguistic minority in
Myanmar – are at times described in its documents as a people, a group, or a community,
but not necessarily as a minority. Uncertainty as to what constitutes a minority for the
purposes of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic,
Religious and Linguistic Minorities, and to the significance in practical terms of such a
status, may partially explain these situations. For these reasons, many of the Special
Rapporteur’s activities have sought to redress, by actively and consistently highlighting the
prominence of minorities as particularly affected by statelessness, hate speech and other
areas of human rights concerns.
8.
For these reasons, the Special Rapporteur has focused on the need for greater clarity
as to who are minorities and what are their human rights, as recognized in the Declaration
on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic
Minorities and other United Nations instruments, including, in particular, article 27 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and article 30 of the Convention on the
1
See www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Minorities/SRMinorities/Pages/SRminorityissuesIndex.aspx.
3