Forum on Minority Issues Ninth session: Minorities in situations of humanitarian crisis
Remarks by Christine Knudsen, Director, Sphere
24 November 2016
Thank you for the invitation to join the panel today on this important occasion. It is perhaps
telling of our world today that this ninth session of the Forum on Minority Issues is focused
on minorities in situations of humanitarian crisis.
The number of people affected by humanitarian crisis has almost doubled in the past
decade. The UN estimates that more than 87 million people require humanitarian aid in
dozens of countries today. Of those, some 12.4 million people are newly displaced in 2015
alone, about 2/3 of them in their own countries.
As the number of people affected by disaster or conflict reaches new highs, it is certainly
timely to consider the specific situation of those who may be disenfranchised, at heightened
risk, and with fewer resources for protection and action.
Even without the testimonies which we have heard already today, we see reports of
minorities across the globe being targeted for abuse and harassment, intentionally forced to
flee, and even killed as a strategy of war in conflicts.
Displacement in particular is often triggered from deep underlying and unresolved tensions
between majority and minority groups, whether national, ethnic, religious or linguistic. In
addition to that, the poor are disproportionately affected in natural disasters, and minorities
usually are disproportionately poor, leading to compounded vulnerabilities.
The effects of crisis are many. And they accumulate exponentially as physical and social
resources are continuously taxed and exhausted over time.
I find myself in an unusual role on this distinguished panel, that of a non-lawyer and a
non-specialist in minority rights. I do hope that I can nonetheless add a useful
perspective—that of how we use legal tenets and tools to bring practical solutions to
communities in crisis including minorities.
International humanitarian law, refugee law, and disaster law create a powerful framework
for the protection and fulfillment of rights—including the principle of non-discrimination and
the specific rights of minorities—yet we continue to see this disproportionate impact. What
can be done to translate the legal framework into practice?
Sphere was launched by humanitarian practitioners in 1997 to think about this very problem.
While initially a voluntary attempt to define common standards, to promote quality and
accountability within the humanitarian sector, it has always located this work within a wider
legal, ethical and even moral framework.
Indeed, Sphere represented a fundamental shift at the time—away from a pure needs-based