E/CN.4/1999/15
page 8
harassment, one of the Republic of Croatia’s top policy priorities has been to
normalize inter-ethnic relations, especially the relations between Croats and
a section of the Serb ethnic and national community or minority in Croatia. A
number of confidence-building measures have been implemented in order to
remove the motive of revenge and to foster greater harmony and tolerance
within Croat society.
16.
A wide range of legislative and practical measures has been introduced
through government policies designed to promote equal opportunities at various
levels of administrative, social and economic life. Some of these measures
have been implemented primarily in the education system and in cultural
activities.
17.
Effective measures have been taken in particular in the field of
education and vocational training in order to fight the prejudices which lie
at the root of racial discrimination and intolerance. Since independence, the
Croatian education system has undergone a major transformation; national
curricula and syllabuses now reflect new principles of economic, social and
political development, thereby enabling pupils to gain access to the skills
and responsibilities required in a democratic society. The new curricula
reflect recommendations made in the field of education, including those found
in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Convention on the Rights of
the Child. In addition, several projects in such areas as tolerance and human
rights are being carried out in pre-school establishments and primary schools
under the auspices of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
18.
Croatia also informs the Commission that it is taking all necessary
measures against incitement to racial hatred in both electronic and printed
media, while at the same time fundamentally protecting freedom of thought and
expression and freedom of the press as guaranteed under article 38 of the
Constitution. As stated above, all manifestations of racism such as racist
propaganda or hate speech are constitutionally and legally forbidden.
Pursuant to article 56 of the Telecommunications Act, Croatian Radio and
Television is obliged to respect human dignity and fundamental human rights,
in addition to promoting understanding of members of ethnic and national
communities or minorities.
19.
The right to equal treatment before the courts and other judicial bodies
is guaranteed in article 26 of the Constitution. This constitutional right,
in addition to other constitutional rights and freedoms, is protected by the
Constitutional Court of the Republic of Croatia (art. 124, para. 1, of the
Constitution). According to article 28, paragraph 1, of the Constitutional
Act on the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Croatia, anyone may file a
constitutional complaint with the Constitutional Court if he or she believes
that a decision handed down by a judicial, administrative or other authority
violates his or her guaranteed rights and freedoms under the Constitution.
20.
In the new Criminal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure, which came into
force on 1 January 1998, provisions relating to the prevention and suppression
of discrimination have been strengthened by increasing the minimum level of
envisaged punishment from three to six months’ imprisonment, with a possible
maximum sentence of five years. The provisions of previous criminal