A/HRC/55/51
30.
From a minority rights perspective, this is a clear case of discrimination in the equal
enjoyment of the right to education. In the Special Rapporteur’s understanding of the
reasoning in the judgment, the Court would agree with that reading, except that, as they
underline, the European Convention on Human Rights contains no specific provision on the
right of minorities to be treated differently, despite the fact that they are in a different situation
to pupils whose mother tongue is the State language. Therefore, despite recognizing that “the
Court may examine allegations of discrimination from different angles”, they choose to
consider that, irrespective of their mother tongue, all pupils are in a similar situation (the right
to have access to education in a particular country) and there is therefore no discrimination,
according to article 2 of Protocol No. 1, read alone and in conjunction with article 14 of the
Convention.18 It is for the Court to decide in such a case whether the situation of the pupils
is similar or different – and it admits that both views could be held. However, it then decides
to consider the applicants in a similar situation to those belonging to the majority of the
population.
31.
That case illustrates why the negative dimension of non-discrimination, with regard
to persons belonging to a minority group, does not offer a sufficient guarantee for equal
enjoyment of human rights. Persons belonging to minorities are not in the same situation as
those belonging to the majority or dominant part of society. Therefore, the requirement of
equal enjoyment of human rights by such persons entails that they should be treated both
equally and differently to persons belonging to the majority/dominant part of society, in order
to guarantee that they are not discriminated against. That requirement stems from the
combined principles of equality and non-discrimination. As a consequence – and
confirmation that such a differentiated implementation of human rights, to guarantee the
effective enjoyment of rights by persons belonging to a minority, is a proper, but complex,
way to achieve non-discrimination – article 8 (3) of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons
Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities states that
implementing differentiated measures for the benefit of persons belonging to a minority
group shall not prima facie be considered contrary to the principle of equality contained in
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.19
32.
Thus, implementing minority rights according to the principles of equal and nondiscriminatory treatment implies including in the concept of the universal enjoyment of
human rights room for differentiated measures to be taken or tolerated by States in order to
implement the requirement of equal treatment. This is why article 2 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights and
article 26 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights are not sufficient to
guarantee the non-discriminatory enjoyment of human rights by persons belonging to a
minority.
B.
Articulation of individual human rights and minority rights
33.
Article 3 (2) of the Declaration on the Right of Persons Belonging to National or
Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities states clearly that no disadvantage shall result for
any person belonging to a minority as a consequence of the exercise or non-exercise of the
rights set forth in the Declaration. That wording shows that the rights linked to persons
belonging to minorities do not appear in a legal vacuum, but are additional to the existing
human rights enjoyed by all, including persons belonging to national or ethnic, religious and
linguistic minorities. That is also the opinion of the Human Rights Committee in relation to
the rights recognized to persons belonging to minorities according to article 27 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The Committee stated, in its general
comment No. 23 (1994), that it observed that article 27 established and recognized a right
that was conferred on individuals belonging to minority groups and that was distinct from,
and additional to, all the other rights that, as individuals in common with everyone else, they
were already entitled to enjoy under the Covenant (para. 1).
34.
The wording of article 3 (2) of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to
National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities clearly states that such persons are
18
19
8
Ibid., para. 162.
Article 4 of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities also conveys the same
idea.
GE.24-00944