THIRTEENTH SESSION OF FORUM ON MINORITY ISSUES
Speech, Social Media and Minorities
FRIDAY 20 NOVEMBER 2020
15:00-17:45 (local time in Geneva)
Item 5: Towards a safer space for minorities: positive initiatives to address online hate speech:
the role of national human rights institutions, human rights organizations, civil society and
other stakeholders
TRIEST NGO - SPEECH:
Trieste, historically and culturally, is a multicultural and multilingual city and the Slovenian mother
tongue community has been part of the social fabric of the territory for centuries.
In recent years we have been witnessing an increes of Italian nationalistic hatred towards the
Slovenian component of the Territory of Trieste, triggered above all, but not only, by the right-wing
political component and easily conveyed through the social media Facebook.
These messages, tolerated - or worse - also propagated by Italian institutional figures, tend to present
the Slovenian autochthonous community as alien, unwanted and without their own rights, first of all
that of the use of their mother tongue in the relationship with public institutions, thus continuing
ideally with this conduct the "ethnic reclamation" begun in 1924 by fascism.
After the war, following the Nazi-fascist crimes, the international community recognized the need to
sanction the proclamation of Fundamental Human Rights with the commitment of all UN member
States to the concrete fulfillment of respect for the highest moral principles, the fundamental rights
and freedoms of the individual, so that certain prevarications could no longer be repeated.
The equal rights of the use of the Slovenian language enshrined in the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty, the
international conventions against discrimination and the protection laws (38/2001) too often remain
so only on paper, unknown and ignored, if not really tacitly rejected even by public authorities and
Italian institutional figures in Trieste.
Furthermore, in 70 years there has never been official stigmatization by the Italian administrative
authorities on the serious consequences of the fascist racial laws suffered by the Slovenian community
of Trieste. This deliberate lack has made it possible even today to carry out a partial historical
rereading of the events that took place in that period, of which the continuous propaganda on the
“foibe” is the clearest example.
This harmful constant flow of media spread through social media and the media, completely out of
control, has generated an increase in alarming episodes, which have also resulted in situations of
inadmissible violence.
At the source of this intolerance are the following factors:
a) disinformation, that is the intentional and lack of correct information by the local media concerning
the protection laws and the relative rights of subjects belonging to the Slovenian linguistic
community;
b) misinformation, that is the use of information channels as a political tool to influence public
opinion, especially by Italian nationalist parties supported by the ample space dedicated to them, with
messages of incitement to intolerance also conveyed thanks to Facebook pages of local web
newspapers with a significant number of followers.