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of men and enforces rigid gender roles, denying wo men and others full agency,
especially over their reproductive and sexual rights. Non-conforming women become
a target for populist nationalists, who in some cases carry out misogynist online and
other attacks against these women. Nationalist populist ferv our in some parts of the
world has also advanced a backlash against equal rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, queer and intersex (LGBTQI) persons in ways that deny their inherent
human dignity and entitlement to full enjoyment of human rights. A comprehensive
racial equality analysis of nationalist populism must keep sight of the ways that
multiple intersecting social identities transform the experience of racial
discrimination in this context, as they do in others. It must also keep sight of th e ways
that States use patriarchal, gender-discriminatory laws to achieve racial, ethnic and
religious exclusion, as canvassed in this mandate’s most recent report to the Human
Rights Council. 14
14. There is reason to believe that new forms of media have aided or amplified the
influence of nationalist populism, and leaders of these movements have been
especially successful at exploiting new media technology (including social media) for
their benefit. Research has highlighted, for example, the role of increa singly
diversified media that focus more on sensationalism, which is a communication style
favoured by populists. 15 The provocative nature of nationalist populist leaders is
appealing in media industries structured around sensationalism and the reporting of
scandalous news, in order to increase readership. Even as nationalist populists have
profited from media, however, they have been characteristically repressive of free and
independent media. Media outlets that are critical of populist leaders are often
described by populists as agents of the corrupt “elite” or outsiders, accused of
producing “fake news”, and may even face the risk of being prevented from operating,
as discussed below.
15. Rightly, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad
Al Hussein, has taken a bold stand, publicly denouncing a number of populist leaders
who have been willing to stoke racism, xenophobia and related intolerance with little
regard for the human rights of many within the borders of their countries: Nor bert Hofer
(Austria), Miloš Zeman (Czechia), Marine Le Pen (France), Viktor Orbán (Hungary),
Geert Wilders (Netherlands), Robert Fico (Slovakia), Nigel Farage (United Kingdom)
and Donald Trump (United States), among others. 16 The High Commissioner’s
response to the Prime Minister of Hungary in particular illustrates the false claims
that often lie at the heart of nationalist populist demagoguery. In February 2018,
Prime Minister Orbán made a statement before a group of city councils in which he
said that “we do not want our colour … to be mixed in with others”. 17 The High
Commissioner noted that the latest census in Hungary, which has a total population
of just under 10 million, 18 indicates that 1,064 men and 260 women from Africa, a
total of 10,559 people from all of Asia, and too few from the Middle East to even be
counted live in Hungary. Yet Prime Minister Orbán has managed to portray Muslims
and Africans as an existential menace to Hungarian culture. Denouncing the racist
and xenophobic lies of populist nationalists remains an urgent priority.
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14
15
16
17
18
18-12945
Ibid.
Benjamin Moffit, The Global Rise of Populism: Performance, Political Style and Representation
(Stanford, California, Stanford University Press, 2016).
“Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, “Zeid warns
against populists and demagogues in Europe and the United States ”, statement to the Peace,
Justice and Security Foundation gala, The Hague, 5 September 2016.
OHCHR, “Hungary: opinion editorial by United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein”, available at www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?
NewsID=22765.
See www.ksh.hu/nepszamlalas/?lang=en.
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