A/74/215
I. Introduction
1.
The present report is submitted pursuant to General Assembly resolution 72/184,
in which the Assembly requested the Secretary-General to submit a report including
information on activities undertaken by Member States, the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the Special Rapporteur of
the Human Rights Council on minority issues, relevant United Nations entities and
other relevant stakeholders to enhance the implementation of the Declaration on the
Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic
Minorities and to ensure the realization of the rights of persons belonging to national
or ethnic, religious and linguistic minority groups, with a focus on the international
legal and institutional framework for the protection of the rights of all such persons.
2.
In the report, general developments at the United Nations are highlighted and
selected areas of action are enumerated, noting human rights challenges faced and the
measures taken by Member States, national human rights institutions and various
United Nations actors to address concerns at both the global and national levels. The
report is based on the findings and reports of various United Nations bodies and
mechanisms and on the written replies received from Member States and other
stakeholders to a note verbale sent by OHCHR on behalf of the Secretary-General. 1
3.
Global consensus on the principles set out in the Declaration notwithstanding,
persons belonging to minority groups continue to be targeted by very serious human
rights violations in an increasingly widening range of contexts, such as State sanctioned “ethnic cleansing”, the rise in the persecution of religious and ethnic
minority groups, increased levels of hate crimes and hate speech that portrays
minority groups and non-nationals as existential threats to nation States. Around the
world, there is an upsurge in xenophobia, racism and intolerance affecting minority
groups, including rising anti-Semitism, anti-Muslim hatred and persecution of
Christians. Social media and other forms of communication are being exploited as
platforms for bigotry, neo-Nazism and white supremacy movements. Public discourse
is being used for political gain, with use of incendiary rhetoric that stigmatizes and
dehumanizes minority groups, refugees, women and anyone who is seen as “Other”.
Those are not isolated phenomena or the result of the loud voices of a few people on
the fringe of society. Hate is moving into the mainstream – in liberal democracies and
authoritarian systems alike – and with each broken norm, the pillars of our common
humanity are weakened. In the foreword to the United Nations strategy and plan of
action on combating hate speech, the Secretary-General noted that the United Nations
had a long history of mobilizing the world against hatred of all kinds through wide ranging action to defend human rights and advance the rule of law; indeed, the very
identity and establishment of the Organization were rooted in the nightmare that
ensued when virulent hatred was left unopposed for too long.
II. Key developments at the United Nations and the
international legal and institutional framework for the
protection of the rights of all persons belonging to national
or ethnic, religious and linguistic minority groups
A.
Human rights of minority groups
4.
The United Nations human rights system has two types of mechanisms, bodies
based on the Charter of the United Nations and those based on treaties. Both formulate
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The submissions received are on file with OHCHR and available for consultation.
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