6.3 UN SUPPORT TO CAPACITYBUILDING FOR MINORITIES
Overcoming marginalisation by building the
capacity of minorities to fully engage in economic
and political spheres is a major undertaking for
governments. The UN Millennium Campaign
offers grants to civil society for advocacy on the
MDGs. These programmes can be used for pilot
projects that demonstrate good practice in overcoming marginalisation and protecting minority
rights. Other UN agencies have targeted efforts
at building capacity of minorities for cooperating
with governments and the UN.
Minority Fellowship Programme: OHCHR organizes annual human rights training programmes
specifically addressed to minorities. The Minority
Fellowship Programme aims to strengthen the
knowledge of minority representatives of the
UN system and relevant mechanisms so minorities can better promote and protect the rights
of their communities. The Minority Fellowship
Programme started in 2005 and, by end 2009,
over 40 minority representatives from different
ethnic, religious and linguistic communities had
already benefited from this programme. It is
currently available in English and Arabic.37
Community-Led Training for Minorities:
Through OHCHR, the UN also conducts community-led human rights trainings to encourage
former minority fellows and other representatives
to share their knowledge with the entire community. The proposals are submitted to OHCHR
(to the Indigenous Peoples and Minorities Unit),
which analyses their relevance and presents
them to the OHCHR Grants Committee for possible funding. The community-led training deals
with the promotion and protection of human
rights, with the direct involvement of minority
representatives in the training formulation,
methodology, implementation and evaluation.
In the long-term, a harmonized Inter-Agency
Programme could be developed, providing
more opportunities for the fellows to cooperate
with UN agencies and national human rights
institutions upon return.
Community-Led Training in Bulgaria
One Community-Led Training supported by OHCHR was submitted by a former minority fellow
from a Roma community in Bulgaria, to organize a training course in the Municipality of Polski
Trambesh in Bulgaria in December 2006. The project enabled “Roma Together”, the former
minority fellow’s organization, to organize a training workshop for local Roma representatives.
The workshop aimed to engage and equip the local Roma community to put into practice the
2005-2015 “Decade of Roma Inclusion”, as designated by nine countries in Central and South
Eastern Europe. Participants devised a strategy to enhance Roma participation in the official
decision-making process, especially in areas where their rights and daily lives are most affected.
They all agreed that the Municipal Council should set up a standing body of local minority
representatives to provide policy input concerning minority issues. This proposal was accepted
by the Mayor and Head of the Municipal Council, who then presented the proposal to the local
council members. The standing body has now been established. The former minority fellow was
excited to see the knowledge and skills he acquired making a difference at home.
For more information see http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/minorities/fellowprog.htm (accessed 9 August 2009). OHCHR also hosts a similar Indigenous
Fellowship Programme for indigenous peoples: see http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/indigenous/fellowship.htm (accessed 9 August 2009).
37
98
M A R G I N A L I S E D M I N O R I T I E S I N D E V E LO P M E N T P R O G R A M M I N g