United NationsThirteenth Session
of the Forum on Minority Issues
Hate Speech, Social Media and Minorities
Geneva, November 19th-20th, 2020
Agenda item: Causes, scale and impact of hate speech targeting
minorities on social media
Intervention of the Catalan National Assembly (Civil Society Organization)
My name is Carles Fité and I speak on behalf of the Catalan National Assembly,
a grass-roots organization defending the right to self-determination of the Catalan
national minority.
Theuse of hate speech against Catalan population is spreading in Spain, a trend
known as Catalanophobia. This hatred is not new, but a historical constant
throughout centuries, with the goal of portraying Catalans as disloyal people who
had betrayed Spanish state-building.
Since 2017 Spanish authorities have launched a systematic campaign of
repression against the Catalan movement for self-determination, including the
persecution of 2,850 activists and representatives, and the imprisonment of 9 civil
and political leaders. Human rights violations that have been denounced by the
UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention and Amnesty International, among
others.
In the same vein, Spanish media have been often portraying Catalans negatively,
using adjectives such as terrorists, supremacists, racists or treacherous.
Dehumanization paved the way to more violent statements, especially in social
media.
This growth of hate speech has been denounced recently by a report elaborated
by the Law Clinic Aix Global Justice, mentioning cases of harassment and
violence by Spanish far-right supporters, discrimination to Catalan speakers by
public officials or the ban of symbols supporting the Catalan political prisoners.
The report also analysed social media messages in Spain during a period in
2020, in which of the one hundred and thirty thousand conversations in Twitter
analyzed that mentioned "Cataluña", nothing less than a 33% had a negative
connotation.