A/HRC/34/53
“Minorities in situations of humanitarian crises” (2016). Since 2013, the Special Rapporteur
has devoted her annual thematic report to the General Assembly to the same topic as the
Forum session, as a means to contribute to and inform the discussions within the Forum.
The Special Rapporteur notes that the themes she selected for the annual sessions focused
on areas that had emerged as particularly concerning or problematic for minorities and
where they believed that minority rights should be better applied and mainstreamed. She
believes that the Forum makes a vital contribution to deepening international understanding
on these important and topical areas as well as to international standard and norm setting.
87.
During her tenure, the Special Rapporteur has promoted the work of and the
recommendations emanating from the Forum on Minority Issues in other forums. As a
regional follow-up activity to the Forum, she travelled to Banjul in April 2013 to attend the
fifty-third ordinary session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
where, among other activities, she organized a public side event with the participation of
Commissioner Soyata Maïga, who served as Chair of the fifth session of the Forum. That
event provided an opportunity to brief the participants about the mandate and the Forum,
and to share information related to minorities with different African human rights
mechanisms. In November 2015, the Special Rapporteur organized a side event during the
eighth session of the Forum to consider, inter alia, ways to improve the structure and
working methods of the Forum, to share best practices on how to better mainstream its
recommendations and to discuss how United Nations mechanisms, in particular the Forum,
could remain relevant for and accessible to minorities on the ground. In October 2016, on
the occasion of the presentation of her report to the General Assembly, she convened a
consultative session in New York that served as an opportunity to discuss the draft
recommendations of the Forum ahead of its ninth session as well as to raise awareness of
the work of the Forum outside Geneva and engage relevant stakeholders in New York.
88.
It will be essential to ensure the effective continuation of the Forum on Minority
Issues. The Special Rapporteur wishes to thank in particular the Governments of Austria
and Hungary for their generous support from the outset. The Special Rapporteur hopes that
more States will attach increased importance to this unique platform. She encourages them
to demonstrate their commitment to minority rights by contributing to the funding of the
Forum so as to ensure its sustainability and progress.
89.
It will be important in the future to consider bringing the Forum on Minority Issues
into the various regions so members of minorities and NGOs who cannot afford to travel to
Geneva will be able to contribute to the Forum’s deliberations in their respective localities.
It would also be desirable to extend the session for longer than two days so more
participants could take the floor and the discussions could go deeper into the heart of the
recommendations. Other challenges include the limited awareness of the Forum at regional
and local levels and the lack of capacity to follow up on the implementation of its
recommendations. Furthermore, it will be important to foster the ownership of the Forum’s
agenda by minorities themselves, to encourage focused and constructive participation of
States and minority representatives, to strengthen the engagement of other United Nations
bodies in the Forum and to promote a more interactive dialogue and discussion during its
sessions.
90.
Next year will mark the tenth anniversary of the creation of the Forum on Minority
Issues, and the Special Rapporteur considers this to be an ideal opportunity to further reflect
on the above-mentioned challenges and ways to better promote and achieve the goals of the
Forum.
18