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regional and international organizations, including the Office the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human for Human Rights (OHCHR), the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) and the Council of Europe, and civil society, as well as
leading experts on education and language, contributed to the thematic discussions.
On 9 May 2019, he was a keynote speaker at the World Council of Churches
ecumenical strategic forum on racism, xenophobia and racial discrimination, held at
the Ecumenical Institute at Bossey near Geneva. On 27 May 2019, the Special
Rapporteur was a panellist at Deutsche Welle’s Global Media Forum in Bonn,
Germany. The panel was organized by former fellows of the OHCHR Minorities
Fellowship Programme and was entitled “Shifting powers: giving microphones to
minorities”. The Special Rapporteur addressed the need to deconstruct how minorities
are portrayed in social media, and particularly the danger of their voices being
overwhelmed and threatened by the rising tides of hate speech and false information.
17. From 8 to 10 June 2019, the Special Rapporteur organized an expert workshop
in Galway, Ireland, which brought together a group of leading experts on
statelessness. The workshop addressed the root causes of statelessness around the
world and its disproportionate impact on persons belonging to minorities, and
discussed practical recommendations to effectively respond to the issue of deprivation
or denial of citizenship. Following this workshop, and on the basis of his reports to
the Human Rights Council and the General Assembly, and on the recommendations
of the Forum on Minority Issues at its eleventh session, the Special Rapporteur will
develop a practical guide on how to address the growing challenge of the statelessness
of minorities. On 18 June 2019, the Special Rapporteur addressed the high -level
meeting on the theme “A perspective to a future strategy to prevent and fight
anti-Semitism, racism, xenophobia, radicalization and hate speech”, held in Bucharest
under the auspices of the Prime Minister of Romania and co-organized with the World
Jewish Congress. In his address, the Special Rapporteur explained why minorities
were the main targets of hate speech around the world and emphasized that preventing
and combating hate speech, and especially anti-Semitism, required finding a difficult
but necessary balance between freedom of expression and prohibition of hate speech
and incitement to violence. He echoed the message of the Secretary -General that hate
speech was spreading like wildfire through social media and constituted a menace to
democratic values, social stability and peace. On 24 June, he gave a series of lectures
at the Aix-Marseille Université summer school on the practice of human rights, in
Aix-en-Provence, France, with a particular focus on current human rights challenges,
including the issue of hate speech and incitement to hatred against minorities through
social media. On 25 June 2019, he gave the closing speech of the first day of the sixth
annual conference of the International Association of Language Commissioners in
Toronto, Canada. The theme of the conference was “Protecting linguistic minorities,
building stronger societies”, and the Special Rapporteur spoke on how inclusive
societies needed to reflect and accommodate language diversity, in line with relevant
human rights principles for linguistic minorities, such as the prohibition of
discrimination on the ground of language, and the important role that language
commissioners could play in that regard. On 27 June 2019, the Special Rapporteur
was invited to participate in the World Conference on Statelessness, organiz ed by the
Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion, in The Hague, the Netherlands. In his
presentation, the Special Rapporteur framed statelessness as a minority issue and
referred to the risk of an explosive increase in the number of stateless people glob ally
owing to policy and legislative developments, such as those in Assam, India, where
millions faced the threat of being deemed “foreigners” and treated as non-citizens,
and could therefore become stateless if unable to demonstrate any form of citizenshi p.
He warned of a grave situation which could eventually create the conditions not only
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