13th Session of the UN Forum on Minority Issues
Item 3: International Legal and Institutional Framework
20 November 2020
Delivered by Paulina Gutiérrez
Thank you, Chair.
ARTICLE 19 welcomes the timely discussion on online hate speech targeted against
individuals and groups of national, ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities.
We recognise that intolerance, discrimination, and violence against minority groups
disproportionately impacts individuals and communities’ ability to speak, organise, interact and
seek information, as well as to exercise other human rights. To effectively address this
problem, which stems from historical and deep-rooted causes, ARTICLE 19 consistently calls
for an explicit recognition of the relationship between the rights to freedom of expression, nondiscrimination and equality as positive and mutually reinforcing rather than contentious. It is
under this framework that international human rights law provides sufficient guidance to
identify when limitations to the freedom of expression are required and how to adequately
uphold the protection of each respective right. It is therefore crucial to urge States, the private
sector and civil society to consider the following in tackling online hate speech:
1. The Rabat Plan of Action, the 2015 report of the UN Special Rapporteur on minority issues,
and ARTICLE 19’s hate speech pyramid provide a tiered response to hate speech based on
the severity of expressions. These serve as a general principle to identify different types of
hate speech and the specific obligations of States in relation to each category, including hate
speech that must be prohibited according to international criminal law and Art 20(2) of the
ICCPR; hate speech that may be prohibited according to Art 19(3) of the ICCPR; and finally
hate speech that must be protected from restriction but nonetheless raises concerns in terms
of intolerance and discrimination of which States are required to adopt alternative positive
measures to tackle.
2. The clear distinctions between, and adequate implementation of, what constitutes
incitement to discrimination, hostility and violence as opposed to other forms of hate speech
is crucial to refrain from adopting measures that hinder minorities rights to dissent, to speak
out, to challenge the structural obstacles that impair their recognition and the visibility of their
interests.
3. The general notions of “hate speech is protected by the freedom of expression” or “freedom
of expression is hate speech” does not exist under international human rights law. When