A/HRC/19/71
knowledge of the minority languages. Governments should further ensure that officials who
discriminate against minority women are effectively sanctioned.
26.
Governments should conduct periodic reviews of the accessibility of key social
services to minority women, with a view to identifying and removing possible barriers that
may prevent minority women, including those who are victims of violence, from having
access to remedies and protection. The provision of and access to refuges, shelters and
social and health-care services should be culturally sensitive and secure.
27.
Minority women and girls may be particularly vulnerable in conflict and postconflict situations. Peacekeeping operations and national security forces working to secure
peace in regions affected by war and/or rebellion should pay particular attention to the need
to protect minority groups, including the specific needs of minority women and girls. Staff
members, police and military personnel should receive training on the specific needs and
vulnerability of marginalized minority women and girls, in particular with regard to the use
of sexual violence as an instrument of war. Women’s and minority rights should be
mainstreamed in the constitution-making processes in conflict or post-conflict areas.
Minority women should be included in all processes of conflict settlement and post-conflict
reconstruction. Measures should also be taken to ensure access to justice for minority
women and girls and accountability for those guilty of violating their rights.
28.
Evidence demonstrates that minorities in all regions experience denial or deprivation
of citizenship, which affects their full enjoyment of their rights and frequently leaves them
stateless. The consequences of denying or depriving minority groups of citizenship are
considerable. It can have a negative impact on affected persons’ living conditions and the
degree of their integration in all aspects of society. These situations are sometimes
compounded by discrimination against minority women, for example, with regard to the
acquisition, change or retention of nationality and the conferral of nationality on their
children. States are urged to review national laws or policies that may deny or deprive
minority women and their children of their legitimate right to citizenship.
29.
Minority women may be particularly vulnerable to trafficking in persons,
particularly those living in situations of poverty or conflict, or in remote and border regions.
Governments should strengthen bilateral, regional and international cooperation aimed at
the elimination of trafficking in persons, especially women and children. Regional
institutions should be established with concrete plans of action to combat and eliminate all
forms of trafficking in persons and, which should include explicit attention to minority
women and girls, as well as protection measures, in order to prevent their return to their
country of origin where they might be at risk of further violence from traffickers or of retrafficking. Such institutions should pay particular attention to ensuring the recruitment of
minority women within all of their programmes and to the several factors that might make
minority women particularly at risk of trafficking in some situations. Counselling and
support programmes should be culturally sensitive and accessible for minority women who
are victims of trafficking.
30.
Disadvantaged minority women and girls may also be particularly vulnerable to
other contemporary forms of slavery, including forced labour, debt bondage, child labour,
the sale of children, forced prostitution and forced and early marriage. Governments should
put in place systematic measures to identify such practices and take robust action to
eradicate violations.
31.
All women have the right to protection from harmful practices, which may be found
in all communities - majority or minority. Governments should take measures to eliminate
all harmful practices, including those that discriminate against minority women and girls, or
subject them to violence or physical injury. This process should seek and involve the
collaboration of minority, traditional and religious leaders, and especially of minority
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