PART FIVE: DISCRIMINATION AND EXPRESSION
broadcast in the mainstream media or via the Internet, the frequency, the quantity and the
extent of the communications, whether the audience had the means to act on the incitement,
whether the statement (or work) is circulated in a restricted environment or widely accessible
to the general public;
(f) Likelihood, including imminence: Incitement, by definition, is an inchoate crime. The action
advocated through incitement speech does not have to be committed for said speech to amount
to a crime. Nevertheless, some degree of risk of harm must be identified. It means that the courts
will have to determine that there was a reasonable probability that the speech would succeed
in inciting actual action against the target group, recognizing that such causation should be
rather direct.1166
The Rabat Plan of Action further sets out that distinctions with regard to domestic sanctions should be made
between (a) expression that constitutes a criminal offence; (b) expression that is not criminally punishable,
but may justify a civil suit or administrative sanctions; (c) expression that does not give rise to criminal, civil
or administrative sanctions, but still raises concern in terms of tolerance, civility and respect for the rights of
others.1167 The Rabat Plan of Action notes with concern that perpetrators of incidents that indeed reach the
threshold of article 20 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights are generally not prosecuted,
whereas members of minorities are often de facto persecuted, with a chilling effect on others, through the
abuse of vague domestic legislation, jurisprudence and policies.1168
A focus on prohibition has led, in a number of countries and contexts, to expression that is protected by
international human rights law being deemed “hate speech” because it is politically inconvenient or contentious,
or because it is not acceptable in the view of the majority. This is a problem that disproportionately affects
groups at risk of discrimination and that may be part and parcel of negative treatment affecting minorities.
At the same time, there is often denial that hate speech affects specific groups, in particular minorities.1169 The
result is a situation in which “on the one hand, ‘real’ incitement cases are not prosecuted, while on the other
hand peaceful critics are persecuted as ��hate preachers’”.1170 These are troubling, problematic developments and
are part of wider threats to civic space, the consideration of which is beyond the scope of the present guide.1171
PART FIVE
At the same time, there is growth of court and other adjudicator action against hate speech, due to rapidly
rising concerns in this area, not least due to the spread of hate online because of the spread of hate speech by
clergy and other religious figures.1172
1. Assessing context
Certain of the criteria set out under the Rabat threshold test merit comment, in particular as there is
international jurisprudence in particular cases or commentary elaborating aspects of their meaning. For
example, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has also found States in violation of
the relevant Convention in cases concerning offensive public signage. In the case of Hagan v. Australia, an
1166
Ibid., para. 29.
1167
Ibid., para. 20.
1168
Ibid., para. 11.
1169
The Special Rapporteur on minority issues has noted that: “The menace of hate speech affects minorities first and foremost. Whether by
omission or not, many actors in the field fail to systematically acknowledge and nominally admit who the main targets are of racism,
prejudice, scapegoating and even incitement to violence in social media. By not specifically mentioning minorities, the extent and brutality
of hate speech is ignored, even camouflaged in a fog of generalities. In a sense, everyone becomes an accomplice to hate when the main
victims remain unnamed. The result is fertile ground to feed intolerance and exclusion, the godparents of hate towards minorities.”
See A/HRC/46/57, para. 22.
1170
OHCHR, “Threshold test on hate speech now available in 32 languages”, 15 May 2020. Available at www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/
Pages/Hate-speech-threshold-test.aspx.
1171
United Nations, “United Nations Guidance Note: Protection and Promotion of Civic Space” (2020). Available at www.ohchr.org/
Documents/Issues/CivicSpace/UN_Guidance_Note.pdf.
1172
United Nations, “Strategy and Plan of Action on Hate Speech”; and OHCHR, #Faith4Rights Toolkit, module 7. On human rights and hate
speech by clergy, see Tamas Kadar, “Dealing with cases involving hate speech and incitement to discrimination by the clergy” (Strasbourg,
Council of Europe Press, 2021).
181