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(b)
Establishment of an independent authority to ensure equal opportunity and to monitor
racial and religious discrimination
143. States should consider establishing, as several countries have already done (Australia,
Belgium, India, Norway, United States), an independent authority to monitor racial and religious
discrimination and, more particularly, aggravated discrimination, and to make proposals for
legislative, economic and social reforms. This authority should have genuine autonomy, i.e. its
members should be independent of Government, and it must be given guarantees of security and
inviolability. Its task would be, inter alia, to receive and consider complaints relevant to its
work. It may also initiate and pursue inquiries on its own motion, entrusting them to one of its
members or independent specialists. Lastly, it would be responsible for conciliation or
mediation, in cooperation with domestic judicial bodies, among the parties belonging to different
ethnic and/or religious groups, and for dealing with disputes arising from acts of religious and
racial intolerance.144
B. Prevention of aggravated discrimination
144. In several of his reports, the Special Rapporteur on religious intolerance summarizes the
essence of what needs to be done in this area: “Human minds are the source of all forms of
intolerance and discrimination based on religion or belief, and should therefore be the main
target of any action to curb such behaviour” (A/50/440, para. 82). In matters of human rights, a
culture of tolerance cannot be imposed. Prevention therefore has a crucial role to play. The
enormous progress that has been made in protecting human rights has been due to preventive
action and a positive evolution of the human mind. Action can be taken in several areas:
education and training, information and communication, inter- and intra-denominational
dialogue, town planning and democracy and development.
1. Education and training
145. Central to prevention is the idea of education and culture in the broadest sense of the
terms. It is not only poor or inadequate punitive legislation that produces acts of discrimination;
culture and education, although they may not actively promote such attitudes, may not do
enough to stigmatize them. The role of education was recognized very early on in several
international instruments.145 “Education can make a decisive contribution to the internalization
of values based on human rights and to the emergence, both at the individual as well as the group
level, of attitudes and behaviour reflecting tolerance and non-discrimination” (A/50/440,
para. 36). Tomorrow’s decision-makers and citizens can begin acquiring a spirit of tolerance and
a positive image of others at a very early age. The school, like the family, is a place where
minds are formed, whether tolerant or not; it is a key element of action to prevent religious and
ethnic discrimination. The school, and especially primary and secondary school, is a prime
training ground for the fight against racial and religious discrimination. The provisions of
article 5, paragraph 2 of the Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice of 27 November 1978, are
very useful in that regard: States and other competent authorities and the teaching profession
must ensure “that curricula and textbooks include scientific and ethical considerations
concerning human unity and diversity and that no invidious distinctions are made with regard to
any people”, and should make “the resources of the educational system available to all groups of
the population”.146 It is essential to disseminate and popularize the principles contained in the