E/CN.4/2005/18
page 5
racism, anti-Semitism, Christianophobia and Islamophobia from 11 to 14 November 2004 in
Barcelona, Spain. The Commission, in its resolution 2004/6, asked the Special Rapporteur to
prepare a report on Islamophobia, while the General Assembly, in its resolution 58/160,
encouraged the Special Rapporteur to continue his work and expressed deep concern at the
increase in Islamophobia, anti-Semitism and Christianophobia. In light of the mandates
entrusted to him, particularly the statement which the Secretary-General of the United Nations
made at the United Nations seminar on anti-Semitism held at New York on 21 June 2004, calling
on the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism and the Special Rapporteur on
freedom of religion or belief to actively explore ways of combating anti-Semitism more
effectively in the future, the Special Rapporteur considered it necessary, in order to help the
Commission to explore these issues more fully, to organize a discussion about Islamophobia,
anti-Semitism and Christianophobia, focusing on their specific characteristics as well as the
universality of their underlying causes. This seminar brought together some 30 high-level
experts who presented and discussed their research papers on these three topics. The Special
Rapporteur’s thoughts and recommendations, based on the outcome of that meeting and other
sources of information, are presented in a separate report (E/CN.4/2005/19).
B. Participation in the work of the General Assembly
at its fifty-ninth session
5.
The Special Rapporteur has submitted two reports to the General Assembly: an interim
report (A/59/329) and a study on the question of political platforms which incite or encourage
racial discrimination (A/59/330). The interim report focuses on the country visits which he
undertook in 2004, the main meetings which he attended with a view to contributing to the
implementation of the Durban Programme of Action, and contemporary manifestations of
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, particularly racism in sport,
racist propaganda on the Internet and manifestations of racism associated with Islamophobia and
anti-Semitism. The Special Rapporteur recommended that the General Assembly should call on
international sports bodies to take appropriate measures to eradicate racism in sport and
cooperate to that end with the relevant human rights mechanisms, in particular the Committee on
the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and the Special Rapporteur. He also invited the
General Assembly to alert Member States to the growing importance of the intellectual front in
the fight against racism, discrimination and xenophobia, the need to devise an intellectual
strategy for combating that phenomenon in the domain of ideas, concepts, images, perceptions
and value systems which fuel the construction of a racist, discriminatory and xenophobic culture
and mindset, and the importance of reinforcing the legal and political strategy against racism and
discrimination.
6.
The Special Rapporteur welcomes the high standard of the interactive dialogue that
took place in the Third Committee of the General Assembly and the discussions which he
enjoyed on that occasion with representatives of the Member States, who expressed concern
about racism in sport and on the Internet but also stressed the positive role that sport and the
Internet can play in the fight against racism, as well as the central role of education in combating
racism. While the Special Rapporteur agrees that sport can be an excellent vehicle for
combating racism, he cannot fail to observe, with concern, that sport remains the theatre for a
high number of racist incidents (see paragraphs 29-38 below). In the international domain,
States have yet to reach a political agreement on how to prevent the Internet being used for racist