A/70/321 10. The Institute also participated in educational activities mandated as part of suspended sentences for offences related to discrimination. For example, between 2013 and 2014, some 15 persons attended tributes to a former Nazi official that were held in a cemetery in Buenos Aires. The persons concerned were sentenced to probation and were required to attend training provided by the Institute. The training covered topics such as racism, discrimination, xenophobia and Nazism and was aimed at raising awareness about the grave nature of neo-Nazi acts and the importance of human rights. 11. The Institute also conducted campaigns against racism. In 2011, it created the “Intercultural Area”, which covered the issue of discrimination and racism directed towards minority groups. The Intercultural Area aimed to combat racist practices through awareness-raising and visualization. As part of this campaign, the Institute also published a booklet entitled “Racism: towards an intercultural Argentina ”, which included a section on the Holocaust as an example of institutionalized racism. 12. The Institute ran two observatory bodies that mo nitor discrimination: the Observatory of Discrimination in Football and the Observatory of Discrimination in Radio and Television. Among their many other roles, these bodies analysed actions, content and commentaries in their respective areas and created a space for the actors to participate and reflect upon issues. The Institute also created a monitoring mechanism for hate speech on the Internet which, with regard to anti -Semitism, collaborated with the Delegation of Argentine Jewish Associations, the Arge ntine Jewish Mutual Aid Society and the Latin American Jewish Congress. 13. The Institute also cooperated with civil society and other international and regional human rights mechanisms to fight racism, discrimination, xenophobia and other forms of intolerance. For example, in 2010, the executive branch declared 27 January to be International Holocaust Remembrance Day (decree No. 157/2010). The decree was promulgated as part of Argentina’s commitment as the first and only Latin American member of the International Task Force for Cooperation on Holocaust Education, Remembrance and Research. Finally, the Institute also participated in the Latin American Network against Discrimination, of which it was elected Chair in August 2014 and which has allowed it to share Argentina’s experience with discrimination and give that experience a wider institutional reach. B. Bahrain 14. The Government reported that it had taken steps to combat and eliminate all forms of ideological extremism and racial intolerance by, inter alia, introducing human rights syllabuses in local universities and promulgating a code of ethics for journalists to ensure that they do not condone propaganda that is of a racist nature, express contempt or hatred for religions or incite discrimination or denigration of the views of a social community. 15. The Government had drawn up a code of ethics which required re ligious leaders in Bahrain to exercise moderation in their sermons, promote the values of coexistence and brotherliness and refrain from making politically inflammatory statements or inciting hatred or discrimination against others on the grounds of their racial, doctrinal or other affiliations. 6/21 15-13793

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