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complications of COVID-19. This conflicts with Islamic religious practice, and was
widely seen as a manifestation of the institutionalized discrimination against the
minority Muslims rather than as a public health measure. 28 Four special rapporteurs
of the Human Rights Council issued a joint communication to the Government of
Sri Lanka on 8 April 2020, raising the concern that the rule was a violation of freedom
of religion, and drawing attention to anti-Muslim hate speech and the stigmatization
of Muslims who had tested positive for COVID-19.29
67. The European Roma Rights Centre reported that, without evidence, a Bulgarian
far-right politician had singled out Roma neighbourhoods as “nests of contagion” to
be quarantined. 30 Some mayors had responded by imposing restrictions on Roma
settlements with no recorded cases of COVID-19.31 While general restrictions on
movement were introduced and widely perceived as a necessary response to contain
the spread of the virus, the quarantine, curfew and blockading of Roma
neighbourhoods marked an “ethnicization of the pandemic”. The European Roma
Rights Centre noted that “the measures were deemed to be disproportionate, unrelated
to actual infection rates, and later acknowledged to have been largely ineffective”.
68. While antisemitism, Islamophobia, xenophobia and racism are indeed central,
neo-Nazism and ethnonationalism also embrace homophobia and discrimination
against persons with disabilities. In Uganda, for example, LGBTQ persons have been
blamed for the COVID-19 virus, with some saying that it is divine punishment for
homosexuality and abortion. 32 The Fund for Global Human Rights reports that
emergency measures have been exploited by authorities to target marginalized
LGBTQ youth, who are particularly vulnerable to prejudice and rely on homeless
shelters for safety – especially during periods of crisis, such as in a pandemic. 33
69. There has been a racially disparate impact from the COVID-19 virus within the
labour force sector. As the Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic and the Chinese
Canadian National Council for Social Justice reported in their submission for the
present report, a survey conducted in mid-April in Manitoba, Canada, found that one
in five front-line health-care support workers of Asian heritage reported having
experienced racism in the workplace in recent months. During the same period, only
1 per cent of non-Asian respondents reported being the target of racism in the
workplace. 34
70. According to Adalah, the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel,
economic measures taken by the Government have had a disproportionate impact on
Palestinian citizens of Israel due to existing structural discrimination and
socioeconomic gaps. 35 Significant numbers of Palestinian citizens are not employed
as permanent employees, and are therefore more vulnerable to lay-offs during the
pandemic. At this time, such short-term employment effects the eligibility of many
__________________
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
20-11206
Ibid., p. 4.
See https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/TMResultsBase/DownLoadPublicCommunicationFile?gId
=25175.
European Roma Rights Centre submission.
See https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/TMResultsBase/DownLoadPublicCommunicationFile?gId
=25254. For the response from the Government of Bulgaria, see https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/
TMResultsBase/DownLoadFile?gId=35362.
Equal Rights Trust submission, para. 20 (citing the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, “COVID-19 and the human rights of LGBTI people”, 17 April
2020) and para. 22.
Fund for Global Human Rights, “Update: Ugandan activists rally to defend arrested LGBTQ
youth”, 9 June 2020.
Joint submission by the Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic and the Chinese Canadian
National Council for Social Justice.
Submission from Adalah, the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel.
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