After almost four years of intense activity, the HCNM has been able to identify
certain recurrent issues and themes which have become the subject of his attention
in a number of States in which he is involved. Minority education, in particular
minority language education, is a high priority among these since, as the HCNM
has recently stated, “It is clear that education is an extremely important element
for the preservation and the deepening of the identity of persons belonging to a
national minority.” With this in mind, the HCNM requested, in the autumn of 1995,
the Foundation on Inter-Ethnic Relations to consult a small group of internationally
recognized experts with a view to receiving their recommendations on an appropriate
and coherent application of minority education rights in the OSCE region.
The Foundation on Inter-Ethnic Relations – a non-governmental organization
established in 1993 to carry out specialized activities in support of the HCNM –
facilitated a series of consultations of experts from various pertinent disciplines,
including two meetings in The Hague. Among the experts consulted were, on
the one hand, jurists specializing on international law and, on the other hand,
linguists and educationalists specializing on the situations and needs of minorities.
Specifically the experts were:
A.G. Boyd Robertson, Senior Lecturer in Gaelic, University of Strathclyde (United
Kingdom); Dr. Pieter van Dijk, Member of the State Council (the Netherlands);
Dr. Asbjørn Eide, Director of the Norwegian Institute of Human Rights (Norway);
Professor Rein Müllerson, Chair of International Law, King’s College (United
Kingdom); Professor Allan Rosas, Åbo Akademi University (Finland); Dr. Tove
Skutnabb-Kangas, Associate Professor, Department of Languages and Culture,
Roskilde University (Denmark); Professor György Szépe, Department of Language
Sciences, University Janus Pannonius (Hungary); Professor Patrick Thornberry,
Department of Law, Keele University (United Kingdom); Mr. Jenne van der Velde,
Senior Curriculum Adviser, National Institute for Curriculum Development (the
Netherlands).
In so far as existing standards of minority rights are part of human rights, the
starting point of the consultations was to presume compliance by States with all
other human rights obligations including, in particular, freedom from discrimination.
It was also presumed that the ultimate object of all human rights is the full and
free development of the individual human personality in conditions of equality.
Consequently, it was presumed that civil society should be open and fluid and,
therefore, integrate all persons, including those belonging to national minorities.
2
The Hague Recommendations - October 1996