ICERD AND ITS MONITORING BODY
Article 3 —Racial segregation and apartheid
Article 3, which refers to apartheid, may initially have
been directed exclusively at Southern Africa. However,
the Committee makes it clear that this Article prohibits
all forms of racial segregation in all countries, with or
without any initiative or direct involvement by the public authorities.12
The Committee observes that:
while conditions of complete or partial racial segregation may in some countries have been created by
governmental policies, a condition of partial segregation may also arise as an unintended by-product of
the actions of private persons. In many cities residential patterns are influenced by group differences
in income, which are sometimes combined with differences of race, colour, descent and national or ethnic origin, so that inhabitants can be stigmatized and
individuals suffer a form of discrimination in which
racial grounds are mixed with other grounds .13
Article 4 —Racist propaganda, organizations
and activities
The Committee emphasized repeatedly, and notably in
General Recommendations, the paramount importance
of Article 4, which contains provisions that are of a
mandatory character.14 According to this Article and relevant General Recommendations, states parties have
obligations to adopt legislation to penalize the following
acts: (i) dissemination of ideas based upon racial superiority or hatred; (ii) incitement to racial discrimination;
(iii) acts of violence against any race or group of persons
of another colour or ethnic origin; (iv) incitement to such
acts, and (v) provision of any assistance, including financial, to racist activities. Furthermore, organizations, as
well as their activities and propaganda, which promote,
foster or incite racial discrimination, must be declared
illegal and be prohibited. Belonging to such organizations as well as participating in such activities is in itself
also a criminal offence. Article 4 (c) underlines the obligations binding the public authorities at all administrative
levels, including the municipal level.
Full compliance with Article 4 is particularly complicated in many countries, where governments may consider
this provision to unduly restrict freedom of expression
and freedom of association. However, the Committee
holds that the rights to freedom of opinion, expression
and association, are not absolute, but subject to certain
limitations. In its General Recommendation XV (42), the
4
Committee expresses the opinion that the prohibition of
the dissemination of all ideas based upon racial superiority or hatred is compatible with the right to freedom of
opinion and expression, given the saving clause that the
obligations of Article 4 should be fulfilled with due
regard to the principles embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 19) and the rights
expressly set forth in Article 5 of this Convention (first
sentence of Article 4), which is to be understood as a reference to freedom of expression and freedom of association. Further, the Committee draws the attention of states
Parties to Article 20 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, which requires states to prohibit by law any advocacy of national, racial or religious
hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence. Nevertheless, a number of countries,
mainly from the West, made interpretative declarations
upon ratification of the Convention emphasizing the
with due regard clause. Such a declaration is used by a
state to communicate its view and interpretation of this
clause. This is to be distinguished from a reservation in
international law with which a state, when signing or ratRelevant case — conviction of Jersild, a Danish journalist15
This case illustrates the tensions that exist between the provisions of Article 4 and the right to freedom of expression.
Jersild, a Danish journalist, was held criminally liable by
the Danish courts under Article 266 (b) of the Penal
Code,16 which had been introduced in Denmark to implement Article 4 of ICERD, in conjunction with Article 23 of
the Penal Code.17 In a television programme, the journalist
had interviewed three members of a racist group, ‘the
Greenjackets’, and was accused of aiding and abetting
them by allowing and even encouraging highly offensive
and racist statements against foreigners and black people.
The Danish courts held that the journalist’s actions resulted
in the publication of racist statements made by a small number of people. Freedom of expression was not, in the opinion of the courts, a justifiable ground for acquittal in light of
the interest in protecting against racial discrimination.
In the examination of Denmark’s report in 1990, several
members of CERD claimed to be highly satisfied with the
results of the case, stating that it was ‘the clearest statement yet, in any country, that the right to protection against
racial discrimination took precedence over the right to
freedom of expression’.18
Jersild brought the case to the European Court of Human
Rights, which decided that the journalist’s right to freedom
of expression guaranteed under Article 10 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms had been violated. The Court also
stated that Denmark’s obligations under this European
Convention had to be reconciled with its obligations under
ICERD.19
ICERD: A GUIDE FOR NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS