A/HRC/49/46
needed implementation of these rights and protections. He also invited participants to seize
the opportunity provided by the 30th anniversary of the UN Declaration on the Rights of
Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities in 2022 to
relaunch attention and efforts towards the very core of the premise and promise of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights on “the inherent dignity and of the equal and
inalienable rights of all members of the human family as the foundation of freedom, justice
and peace in the world.”
32.
On 12 November 2021, the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, Dr Fernand de
Varennes, was an online panellist with UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle
Bachelet and OSCE High Commissioner Kairat Abdrakhmanov. The event, organised in
collaboration with the UN Office in Geneva, focussed on the effective participation of
minorities in economic life as a strategy for conflict prevention. The Special Rapporteur
called for much more needed focus on enhancing multilateral and other efforts in regards to
the participation of minorities in the economic sphere because of the limited attention to
minorities, and indigenous peoples, being increasingly left behind and discriminated in
economic and other areas of participation, in part because of growing global inequalities as
well as disturbing leaps of hate speech, xenophobia and majoritarian demagogy and
intolerance. He also decried the widespread omission of minorities in SDG indicators and
measures, thus largely leaving out minorities since ‘those who are not counted, do not count’.
33.
On 22 November 2021 the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, Dr Fernand de
Varennes, gave a press conference at the end of his two-weeks mission to the United States
of America, from 8-22 November. He urged the US government to overhaul legislation to
prevent increasing exclusion, discrimination and hate speech and crimes against minorities,
indicating that the legal landscape for the protection of human rights is far from
comprehensive or coherent. He also indicated that recent years have seen these deficiencies
in human rights and the phenomenal growth of hate speech in social media, growing
inequalities between have and have nots, often minorities and indigenous peoples, creating
toxic conditions and an unhealthy pandemic of the mind, a poisoning of individual minds and
society in many parts of the country.
34.
On 23 November 2021 the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, Dr Fernand de
Varennes, was a keynote panellist for the launch of the comprehensive #TravellerHomesNow
Monitoring Report, as well as the annual meeting of the Galway Traveller Movement. The
launch, organised by the National Travelers Women’s Forum and the #TravellerHomesNow
campaign team, addressed the continuing unacceptable conditions under which Travellers
are still allowed to live, as well as mapping progress made in #TravellerHomesNow
campaign from 2017- 2021 using a human rights framework.
35.
On 26 November 2021 the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, Dr Fernand de
Varennes, said the opening words and participated in a meeting of a minority global
consultation group on future direction and focus for the 2022 30th anniversary of the UN
Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities.
36.
On 1 December 2021, the Special Rapporteur on minority issues Dr Fernand de
Varennes addressed online a panel on the Minority issues and universality, organised by the
Geneva Human Rights Platform and the Geneva Academy. He pointed out that the principle
of ‘universality’ is at times used in states in the sense that majoritarian cultural and other
preferences are deemed to be ‘the norm’, with those of minorities as ‘outside the norm’ and
thus in opposition to the universal and equal application of human rights standards, whereas
in reality international standards are ‘agnostic’ in terms of cultural and similar approaches.
Majoritarian impositions are differences of treatment which can themselves be
discriminatory if they have disproportionate or unjustified impact on the different cultural
preferences of minorities, rather than minorities seeking ‘exceptional or special treatment’
from universal standards.
37.
On 2 and 3 December 2021, the Special Rapporteur on minority issues Dr Fernand de
Varennes hosted the 14th UN Forum on Minority Issues, held in a hybrid format because of
COVID health measures in Geneva. Some 650 participants registered for the two-day event
– the largest number in the history of the UN Forum, to hear expert panellists from all regions
23