A/73/205
Report of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues
Statelessness: a minority issue
Summary
The mandate of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues was established by the
Commission on Human Rights in its resolution 2005/79. It was subsequently extended
by the Human Rights Council, most recently in its resolution 34/6.
In the present report, in addition to giving an overview of his activities, the
Special Rapporteur tackles the issue of statelessness and explores why most of the
world’s more than 10 million men, women and children who find themselves deprived
of citizenship are persons belonging to national or ethnic, religious and linguistic
minorities.
The Special Rapporteur presents the underlying causes and patterns that result in
millions of minorities around the world losing or being denied citizenship out of all
proportion. First, he investigates how and why certain minorities find themselves
particularly affected, and even at times specifically targeted, by legis lation, policies
and practices contributing to or resulting in statelessness. Second, he describes the
contexts and patterns that explain the disproportionate extent to which statelessness is
experienced by persons belonging to minorities, and why this is at times directly linked
to their affiliation to a minority group. Third, he identifies the contexts and patterns
that involve breaches of international human rights obligations, in particular the
international prohibition of discrimination.
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18-12048