A/65/287
5.
The thematic reports include analysis of global minority issues and provide
recommendations to States and others. In 2006, the independent expert presented a
thematic study to the Human Rights Council, which focused attention on minorities
in the context of poverty alleviation and poverty reduction strategies and the
Millennium Development Goals. In 2007, she undertook thematic research and held
a seminar on the global issue of minorities and discriminatory denial or deprivation
of citizenship, and in 2008 presented a thematic report and recommendations on this
issue to the Human Rights Council.
6.
By resolution 6/15 of 28 September 2007, the Human Rights Council created
the Forum on Minority Issues. Since 2008 the Forum has provided an important
platform for minorities and the discussion of minority issues. The independent
expert is required to guide the sessions of the Forum, prepare its annual meetings
and make recommendations to the Human Rights Council for thematic subjects to
be considered by the Forum. In December 2008, the inaugural Forum on Minority
Issues considered minorities and the right to education (A/HRC/10/11/Add.1). In
November 2009 the second annual session of the Forum considered minorities and
effective political participation (A/HRC/13/25). The third annual session of the
Forum will take place on 14 and 15 December 2010 and will be dedicated to the
issue of minorities and effective participation in economic life. The Forum seeks to
provide concrete and tangible outcomes in the form of thematic recommendations of
practical value to all stakeholders. The independent expert reports to the Human
Rights Council on the recommendations emerging from the Forum.
7.
In accordance with the mandate of the General Assembly to promote stability,
security and peaceful relations between States, the theme of the present report is the
role of minority rights protection in conflict prevention. Among the essential
elements of a strategy to prevent conflicts involving minorities are respect for
minority rights; dialogue between minorities and majorities within societies; and the
constructive development of practices and institutional arrangements to
accommodate diversity within society.
8.
The present report will focus on how attention to minority rights violations at
an early stage — before they lead to tensions and violence — would make an
invaluable contribution to the culture of prevention within the United Nations, save
countless lives and promote stability and development.
9.
The history of the development of minority rights at the United Nations has
been closely linked to the need to address tensions between minorities and the State,
and between population groups. The Declaration, which establishes the mandate of
the independent expert, states in its preamble that the promotion and protection of
the rights of persons belonging to national or ethnic, religious and linguistic
minorities contribute to the political and social stability of States in which they live.
The drafting of the Declaration began in 1978, and received added impetus with the
break-up of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. Those events led to
concerns that tensions between the many ethnic and religious communities in those
entities would erupt and result in long-running wars. They also inspired efforts to
develop standards and mechanisms on minority rights in the Council of Europe and
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
10. By resolution 47/135 of 18 December 1992, the General Assembly adopted the
Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities. The importance attached to it was summed up by the
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