In Russian see below
Anti-Discrimination Centre Memorial Brussels
Statement at the 16th UN Forum on Minority Issues, 30 Nov – 1 Dec 2023
Agenda Item 1: Challenges to Inclusion & Equality: barriers in social and economic
participation of minorities
The region of Eastern Europe and Central Asia has been experiencing significant cataclysms in recent
years. In the shadow of Russia's aggressive war against Ukraine, negative political processes in
Central Asia have been left without proper international attention. Meanwhile, in this region we see
strengthening of authoritarian tendencies reacted with mass protests, attempts of state coup. The antiDungan pogrom in Kazakhstan in 2020 became a kind of repetition for the coup attempt in January
2022. Repressions against Pamiri peoples in Tajikistan and restriction of the political and cultural
autonomy of the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Oblast, attempts to deprive the Karakalpak people
of their sovereignty as part of Uzbekistan – all these events have led to significant casualties and
demonstrate how vulnerable minorities are during political cataclysms and crises.
In Russia, over the past decade, state propaganda has shaped the discourse about Russia's exclusivity,
its "special historical path" and "traditional values." At the same time, hatred and discrimination
against various minorities were escalated – meaning anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, migrantophobia,
anti-Gypsism. All this legitimized direct violence and became a prerequisite for Russia's aggression
against Ukraine. In its turn, the war intensified hatred and xenophobia, and minorities were again
particularly vulnerable. In the occupied territories of Ukraine, the Crimean Tatar people are being
persecuted, and the Roma population is suffering.
After the terrorist aggression of HAMAS against Israel, anti-Semitic demonstrations and pogroms
took place in the North Caucasus region of Russia, in the Republic of Dagestan, where the population
traditionally practices Islam. The Russian authorities did not take proper response measures, the
rioters were not brought to justice. At the same time, in other regions of Russia racism towards people
from the North Caucasian republics also takes place. This is happening against the general
background of the discrimination of migrant workers from Central Asia, mostly from traditionally
Muslim countries – Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan. Thus, the state support for xenophobia leads
to a new escalation of hatred and open aggression.
The mandatory conditions for equal participation of minorities in social and economic life are
promotion of the ideas of democracy and human rights; zero tolerance to anti-Semitism,
Islamophobia, ethnic hatred.