State towards acts of violence and incitement to hatred as an indicator of its fulfilment of
responsibility to protect.
Ambassador of Citizenship, PAXs initiative/ Harilar, Iraq, Mr. Zuher Lazgeen
Mr. Lazgeen began by stressing the situation of minorities in Iraq. He discussed how
because of the war, persons belonging to minorities have been kidnapped, killed and
trafficked. Furthermore, he elaborated on the causes and roots of this situation. He
described how minorities are misunderstood and people hold incorrect views about their
beliefs, ideology and ways of living. He discussed how these misconceptions and resulting
hatred towards certain minorities, combined with hate speech directed against them, have
reached a critical level and have led to tangible violence. He highlighted how education
curricula do not include teaching of the history, culture and traditions of different
minorities and that ignorance and lack of knowledge about minorities is widespread in the
country. He described how minorities are discriminated against on a daily basis in schools,
universities, and in many aspects of public life and are not able to counter this
discrimination. He highlighted how this has created an environment where minorities
accepted their own discrimination. He discussed how discrimination was not tackled at an
early stage because there was no mechanism to counter it, which gradually led to atrocity
crimes against minorities. He stressed that the lack of participation of minorities in public
life also contributed to violence and atrocities. He also highlighted how clan-based and
religious belief systems also contribute to discrimination. He concluded by stressing that
civil society is playing a strong role by challenging violations of the rights of minorities
but formal instruments, which are essential for addressing discrimination at an early stage,
such as anti-discrimination laws are non-existent.
Discussion
The following issues were raised during the discussion under Item III:
- The link between discrimination on ethnicity, religion and/or language grounds
and extreme poverty and the consequences of such discrimination on fundamental
human rights such as land ownership for minorities.
- The urgency to identify and act upon those situations where systematic
discrimination, exclusion, marginalization and inequality expose minorities to the
risk of violence and atrocity crimes and build appropriate legal and policy
frameworks upon human rights universal principles.
- The importance of genuinely recognizing that the effective participation of
persons belonging to minorities in their society contribute towards eradicating
discrimination against them and ensuring stable and less prone to violence
societies.
- The importance of recognizing and addressing multiple forms of discrimination
faced by certain persons belonging to minority groups, including women and girls
and the importance of paying particular attention to their situation.
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