A/75/211
categories of minorities: national or ethnic, religious and linguistic, as described in
the mandate provided by the Human Rights Council. A number of United Nations
instruments are also quite clear and specific that the concept of a minority is
circumscribed to up to four categories of beneficiaries. While there have been
numerous discussions on what constitutes a minority, the significance of the four
categories of beneficiaries in substantive terms has until now still not been
systematically or comprehensively addressed. The significance of the distinct
categories, perhaps surprisingly, is not elucidated, nor even alluded to, in United
Nations guidance document on minorities. 4
17. This lacuna in identifying objectively and consistently who is a minority in United
Nations instruments is a recurring stumbling block to the full and effective realization
of the human rights of minorities. Different States Members of the United Nations a t
times have had differing views on the groups of persons constituting a minority. At
times, the not-so-subtle suggestion has even been made that minorities “don’t really
exist”. Almost always, the absence of clarity as to who are the beneficiaries under t he
categories of national or ethnic, religious and linguistic has been used to try to restrict
those who can claim human rights protection as members of a minority.
18. As the study indicates, that uncertainty has also on occasion led to the supposition
that determining the beneficiaries of human rights protection for minorities is left
entirely to the discretion of national Governments. Some Member States may also
hesitate to engage on matters relating to minorities since they do not have definitions of
who are national or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities and what that entails.
19. The responses to the Special Rapporteur’s call for submissions have highlighted
differing and even contradictory views: in their responses, some States have insisted
that they have no minorities because their constitutions guarantee the equality of all
citizens, so that there is no discrimination towards national or ethnic, religious and
linguistic groups. 5 For these, it is implied that minorities in the territory of a State
must, somehow, be non-dominant in the jurisdiction in which they find themselves. A
few other States, however, insist on the opposite: that any “vulnerable” group, not
only national or ethnic, religious and linguistic groups, could constitute a mino rity,
and that there was therefore no need to distinguish between these four categories of
beneficiaries, despite their enumeration in United Nations documents. 6
20. As a first step in addressing some of these matters, the Special Rapporteur, in
his 2019 report to the General Assembly, 7 provided a working definition of the
concept of minority, in line with article 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, which indicates that an ethnic, religious or linguistic minority is any
group of persons that constitutes less than half of the population in the entire territory
of a State, whose members share common characteristics of culture, religion or
language, or a combination of any of these and without any requirement of
citizenship, residence, official recognition or any other status.
21. In essence, a minority is a group that is not in the majority, at the national level,
in terms of culture, religion or language.
22. That concept recognizes as a matter of objective fact the existence of et hnic,
religious or linguistic minorities and is not premised on any legal recognition by
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4
5
6
7
6/20
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), “Minority Rights:
International Standards and Guidance for Implementation” (New York and Geneva, 2010).
See CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.5, para. 4.
The sample questionnaire for submissions and list of contributors in Annex II is available at
www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Minorities/SR/Sample_questionnaire_and_list_of_contributors.
docx.
See A/74/160, para. 59.
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