Name: Amnesty International
Created On: 16/10/2015 06:49:56
Created By: Y
Modified On: 23/02/2017 14:25:37
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AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Check against Delivery
26 November 2014
UN Human Rights Council
Forum on Minority Issues
Seventh Session
25 — 26 November 2014
Mr. Chairman,
Minorities live in specific places and violence against them takes place in
specific contexts. It is important that this Forum convey to the Human Rights
Council and the broader United Nations the importance of preventing and
addressing violence against specific minorities in the specific places where that
violence is foreseeable or has already taken place.
Discrimination against ethnic, linguistic and religious minorities, including
members of Tamil, Muslim and Christian communities remains a serious problem
in Srri Lanka. Minorities have been singled for restrictions on
freedom of expression and association. Police have failed to protect minorities
when they have been threatened with violence by communal forces, and have
not arrested perpetrators, even when there was photographic evidence to
identify them.
Some political leaders from the majority Sinhalese community have exploited or
manufactured religious tensions, leading to attacks and violence against
religious minorities, including their places of worship and businesses, which are
typically committed with impunity. Buddhist hard-line nationalist organizations, a
prominent one being the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) have emerged with alleged links
to high government officials and political platforms that are often closely aligned
with those of the ruling party.
These groups have organized protests and attacks against religious minorities
and places of worship, as well as issuing threats and smear campaigns against
human rights defenders and minority opposition politicians.