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34. From 12 to 15 July 2007, the Special Rapporteur took part in the eleventh biennial Open
Dialogue of the Association of American Cultures, held in Denver, Colorado (United States of
America) and entitled “Global Connections to Cultural Democracy”. His address focused on the
key issue of cultural diversity, its use as a historical, intellectual and scientific instrument to
create a hierarchy of races and cultures, and the need not only to promote de facto diversity but
also to enhance the value of pluralism practised out of recognition and respect for diversity and
as a means of promoting it.
35. From 5 to 7 October 2007, the Special Rapporteur visited Perugia (Italy) to attend the
seventh session of the Assemblea dell’Onu dei Populi, an annual event organized by the
Tavola della Pace association and the Italian Coordinating Body for Local Communities for
Peace and Human Rights, which jointly coordinate the activities of over 1,200 associations, local
and national authorities, and civic and religious organizations which are committed to promoting
human rights. In his address, the Special Rapporteur drew attention to the need for the
all-inclusive, rather than selective, treatment of human rights and contrasted the rightful rallying
of international opinion in response to the violence in Myanmar with the silence which has
greeted the hundreds of victims of political repression in Guinea. He considered that media
attention should not constitute the only yardstick for measuring the seriousness of human rights
violations and that the main guiding principle must be universality and equal treatment.
36. At the invitation of the Fundación Tres Culturas del Mediterráneo, the Special Rapporteur
also took part in a meeting of civil-society organizations to consider the question of
discrimination against Muslims in Jaén (Spain) on 8 October 2007. This meeting provided an
opportunity to discuss the following subjects in depth: the perception of the Arab and Muslim
world in the media; the role of education in promoting tolerance; and coexistence and
cooperation between Muslims and non-Muslims. The participants adopted a declaration which
was presented at the Conference on Intolerance and Discrimination against Muslims, convened
in Cordoba (Spain) on 9 and 10 October 2007 by the Spanish Chair of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
37. On 6 November 2007, the Special Rapporteur was invited to Washington by the
United States Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe - which helps to formulate
United States policy on the Helsinki Agreements, inter alia within OSCE - in order to give a
presentation of measures to counter crimes motivated by racial and religious hatred in the OSCE
region. He spoke about the increasing racist and xenophobic violence, the growing activism of
political parties with platforms which encourage racism and discrimination, the strategy followed
by these parties and groups of gaining a foothold in government coalitions and even in the
European Parliament, their rejection of multiculturalism, their bias against certain ethnic groups
of immigrants and their attempts to depict them as criminals. He found that in the countries he
had visited the basic ideology underpinning these renewed attempts to stir up racial and religious
hatred centred on the defence of national identity and security.
38. On 28 November 2007, the Special Rapporteur took part in a conference on the follow-up
to the Norwegian Plan of Action against Racism and Discrimination adopted in the wake of the
World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance
held in Durban in 2001. This conference, which brought together representatives of the
Government, civil society, intellectual circles and the media, offered an opportunity to evaluate
the impact of the Plan of Action and to debate each of these actors’ future activities in the