E/CN.4/2005/18
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discriminatory and xenophobic practices. Not only do these incidents provide evidence of a
general increase in racism, discrimination and xenophobia, they also raise the central question of
the relationship between identity constructions and racism, discrimination and xenophobia.
Indeed, these recent incidents all have three characteristics in common:
•
The conflation of questions of race, religion and culture;
•
The way that individual acts lead to clashes between communities or religious
groups;
•
The ideological spin which politicians and the media give to the acts of individuals,
portraying them as manifestations of a clash of cultures. In the Netherlands, for
example, a Liberal Party politician described the murder of Theo Van Gogh as
evidence of the arrival of “Jihad in the Netherlands”.
10.
The Special Rapporteur takes the view that the concept which is common to the
rhetoric that surrounds these incidents is that of identity construction. The way that these
incidents were taken as evidence of a clash of religions, cultures or civilizations can be seen
in analyses of the type “an attack upon our values and our civilization”, “a threat to our
identity”, etc. As a result, these incidents were perceived or portrayed as threatening or calling
into question a national identity which is “in peril”. The crisis in the Netherlands following the
murder of Theo Van Gogh demonstrates the dual mechanism by which discrimination is created:
denial of the particular, the individual or the personal, leading to a systematic interpretation of
private, individual or personal acts as collective behaviour and, thus, the stigmatization of a
community or group.
11.
Similarly, the debate over Turkey’s accession to the European Union and the inclusion of
a reference to Europe’s Christian heritage in the European Constitution showed the same
intellectual and political processes at work; either rejection, owing to an “insuperable” difference
of values or religion, or the retreat of a country, group or continent into an identity forged around
values which are allegedly immutable and fixed for all eternity. In that regard, the Special
Rapporteur wishes to draw attention to the forgotten question of the identity construction of the
new Europe. The identity of the new Europe at the dawn of the twenty-first century can no
longer be what it was in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The construction of
Europe’s present identity takes no account of two movements which have transformed European
identity: the movement of non-European peoples in the post-colonial era, and more recent
immigration, particularly from the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, together with a new
wave of immigration of non-European origin. These identity-changing processes have not been
paid sufficient attention. Moreover, the role of nationalism, a major cause of the inter-European
wars which battered the continent over the centuries, does not appear to have been analysed
properly in terms of its impact on the new Europe.
12.
It is therefore vital, for the deconstruction of racism and xenophobia, to recall the point
which the Special Rapporteur made in his first report to the Commission, namely that the
construction of an identity results in the creation of an enemy, the tendency of a people to focus
on its ethnic, religious or cultural identity to the exclusion of others, and the rejection and
denigration of the other, the odd man out, and, in its contemporary form, of non-nationals,
refugees, immigrants.