A/HRC/52/27
with others; with the Forum on Minority Issues not having seen any significant budgetary
increases, meaning, today, that there are not enough financial resources to cover the travel
costs for the expert panellists whom should be invited to attend. Even one of the few more
recent and promising measures to better recognize and protect minorities, and hear their
voices, and more accessible platforms to raise their concerns and offer constructive solutions,
namely the organization of regional forums on minorities for the Americas, Africa and the
Middle East, Asia and the Pacific, and Europe and Central Asia, is not a permanent fixture at
the United Nations or even a formal activity of the Organization, but was initiated by the
Special Rapporteur as an independent expert and has been made possible because of civil
society support, such as that from the Tom Lantos Institute. The United Nations network on
racial discrimination and protection of minorities was itself moribund without holding any
meetings for years until 2019.22 Even the shining star of OHCHR, the Minorities Fellowship
Programme, has not resumed yearly in-person training since 2020.
48.
Finally, there remains too many examples of United Nations institutions not
responding promptly or effectively to some of the worst human rights and humanitarian crises
until much too late, particularly when it comes to minorities, such as in the responses to the
mass incarceration of members of the Uighur and Muslim minorities in Xinjiang, the
genocides and crimes against humanity in Rwanda committed against the Tutsi minority and
in Bosnia and Herzegovina against the Muslim minority, the massive denial of citizenship
rights for more than a million persons belonging to the Rohingya minority, and subsequent
refugee and displacement crises, to the more recent situation of millions from the Muslim
minority being at risk of becoming stateless in India and the situation of forced assimilation
that seems to be involved when as many as one million children of the Tibetan minority in
China are separated from their families to be sent to residential schools and denied their
religious, linguistic and cultural rights.
49.
Whereas the protection of minorities was presented as a priority at the United Nations
in 1948 and subsequently as a significant area to develop, and despite the adoption 30 years
ago of the Declaration and the subsequent issuance of the 2013 Guidance Note of the
Secretary-General, most comments from civil society received by the Special Rapporteur
reflected the view that the actual institutional measures for the protection of minorities have
not materialized, whereas the protection afforded to other groups has been significant. They
rather confirm the Secretary-General’s own view expressed in September 2022 that “we are
dealing with outright inaction and negligence in the protection of minority rights”.
50.
Needless to say, this is particularly troubling in a context in which globally there
appears to be a growing hostility against minorities, and subsequent denial of their rights, as
seen in the rise of online and offline hate speech and hate crimes overwhelmingly targeting
minorities,23 the record-level increases in the number of stateless persons worldwide, with
more than 75 per cent of them being persons targeted because they belong to specific
minorities,24 the troubling and increasing restrictions on the identity of minorities in relation
to education in their own languages, 25 and the growing number of conflicts involving
minorities with grievances related to exclusion and discrimination, or situations in which
minority issues are instrumentalized26 to the point at which there are now more conflicts than
at any other time since the adoption 30 years ago of the Declaration – and the subsequent
atrocities, even crimes against humanity, and humanitarian crises.
51.
Nevertheless, and perhaps counterintuitively, what was eminently apparent in the
processes and consultations occurring in 2022 within the frameworks of the Forum on
Minority Issues and the four regional forums, as well as the call for submissions for the
present thematic report, was not despair – despite the despondency in an admittedly not
particularly favourable global context – but the overall desire of minorities and human rights
and civil society organizations to move forward and do more and better – including at the
United Nations.
22
23
24
25
26
12
A/77/246, para. 56.
A/HRC/46/57.
A/73/205.
A/HRC/43/47.
A/HRC/49/46.