A/HRC/29/24
III. Essential elements of a minority rights-based approach
to protection of Roma worldwide
17.
The Special Rapporteur welcomes the present report as an opportunity for her to
address the situation of Roma globally through a minority rights lens, using the four pillars
of minority rights: (a) the protection of a minority’s existence, including combating
violence against them and preventing genocide; (b) the protection and promotion of the
identity of minority groups and their right to enjoy their collective identity and to reject
forced assimilation; (c) the guarantee of the rights to non-discrimination and equality,
including the ending of structural or systemic discrimination and the promotion of
affirmative action when required; and (d) the right to effective participation in public life
and decisions that affect them.
18.
The present report should be seen as complementary to the work undertaken by
many other United Nations mechanisms. That includes the previous work carried out under
the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, in the form of thematic reports,
country reports, communications and press releases.12 It also includes the work of other
special procedures mandate holders, including the Special Rapporteur on contemporary
forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, who has
reported on the causes and consequences of racism against Roma (see, for example,
A/HRC/17/40, paras. 5–25, and A/HRC/26/50) and regularly addresses challenges facing
Roma in country reports (see, for example, A/HRC/23/56/Add.2, A/HRC/20/33/Add.1, and
A/HRC/7/19/Add.2), the Special Rapporteur on the human right to safe drinking water and
sanitation, who made important recommendations regarding Roma in her report on stigma
(A/HRC/21/42) and in relevant country reports (see, for example, A/HRC/18/33/Add.2) and
the Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate
standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination in this context (see, for example
A/HRC/16/42/Add.2, paras. 51–56, and A/HRC/25/54/Add.2, paras. 69–71 and 74–75),
among others. She also notes the role the United Nations treaty bodies have played in
highlighting discrimination against Roma, particularly the Committee on the Elimination of
Racial Discrimination in its general comment No. 27 (2000) on discrimination against
Roma. Roma have also featured prominently in the universal periodic review of States
before the Human Rights Council. The Special Rapporteur refers to her recently published
review of minority issues in the first cycle of the universal periodic review, which
highlighted that over 25 per cent of all minority rights recommendations in the review
referred to the situation of Roma.13 Despite that important work, the Special Rapporteur
nevertheless believes that the full capacity of the United Nation is not yet being used by
Roma rights advocates. The United Nations should be seen as a core Roma rights partner
whose work can complement other mechanisms. She hopes that the present report will
contribute to such an approach.
12
13
6
See the Special Rapporteur’s thematic reports on citizenship (A/HRC/7/23); hate speech and
incitement to hatred against minorities in the media (A/HRC/28/64); and ensuring the inclusion of
minority issues in post-2015 development agendas (A/HRC/25/56). See also the reports of the Special
Rapporteur’s missions to France (A/HRC/7/23/Add.2); Greece (A/HRC/10/11/Add.3); Bulgaria
(A/HRC/19/56/Add.2 and Corr.1); Hungary (A/HRC/4/9/Add.2); Ukraine (A/HRC/28/64/Add.1); and
Bosnia and Herzegovina (A/HRC/22/49/Add.1). See also press releases, available from
www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Minorities/IExpert/Pages/PressRoma.aspx.
See www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/IEMinorities/MinoritiesIssues1stcycleUPRProcess.pdf,
pp. 15–18.