A/HRC/16/45
III.
A minority rights perspective at the international level: a tool
for conflict prevention
65.
According to a statistical assessment carried out by Minority Rights Group
International, over 55 per cent of violent conflicts of a significant intensity between 2007
and 2009 had at their core violations of minority rights or tensions between communities. In
a further 22 per cent of conflicts, minority issues had emerged or receded in the course of
the evolution of the conflict. Those figures indicate that Governments, donors and
intergovernmental organizations need to allocate significant attention and resources to
minority issues as sources of conflict. However, the current picture in this regard is mixed.
A.
United Nations institutional framework
66.
The tragic events in Rwanda and in the former Yugoslavia gave new impetus to
efforts by the United Nations to protect minorities – described by the Secretary-General as
“genocide’s most frequent targets”15. In 2004, the Secretary-General established the
mandate of the Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide. The principal objective of
the Special Adviser is to advise the Secretary-General and the Security Council on actions
to protect vulnerable populations from genocide. The Office of the Special Adviser
attempts to identify a range of potential threats to minority populations at an early stage and
make recommendations regarding constructive management of cultural diversity issues.16
67.
An analysis framework is used by the Special Adviser’s office to identify threats to
minority communities at an early stage. In addition to genocide-specific indicators, such as
the demonization of minority communities and a history of genocide in the country, it
includes indicators of broader significance to minorities, such as conflicts over land, power,
security and expressions of group identity, such as language, religion and culture, and
attacks on cultural and religious property and symbols.17 The Special Adviser’s office is
privy to an enormous flow of information generated by sources inside and external to the
United Nations system. The Special Adviser’s gauge for sifting through that information
flow is calibrated for precursors to genocide: a focus that is limited, fortunately, to a small
number of situations. There is a need for additional tools that focus on chronic abuses of
minority rights at the earliest stages, to identify situations needing more upstream
preventive action.
68.
In the 2005 World Summit Outcome, States Members of the United Nations
conceptualized a principle that is of prime importance to the protection of minorities: the
responsibility to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and
crimes against humanity – “the responsibility to protect”. This concept recognizes the duty
of the international community to intervene to protect populations when their own
Governments cannot or lack the will to do so. It prioritizes above all the use of appropriate
diplomatic, humanitarian and other peaceful means, before legitimate force is
contemplated. The focus of the institutional mechanisms that are being developed to
implement the concept of the responsibility to protect will be limited to specific crimes.18 A
broader focus on minority rights protections as a tool for protection from conflict will need
to be the task of other mechanisms.
15
16
17
18
16
SG/SM/9245, 7 April 2004.
Interview with member of the staff of the Special Adviser’s office, 10 May 2010.
See www.un.org/preventgenocide/adviser/.
See the report of the Secretary-General on early warning, assessment and the responsibility to protect
(A/64/864).