Thank you, Mrs. President
My name is Pastor Lewis from Iraq and I speak on behalf of the Peace and
Freedom Organization.
Mrs. Special Rapporteur, confronting the widespread hate speech against
minorities in the various media does not only promote social awareness,
spread a culture of tolerance and intercultural dialogue,
but it also enhances the representation of members of minorities to directly
confront negative expressions.
The question that minority rights activists have brought up is how to guarantee
that members of minorities have access to freedom of expression in the media
under selective interpretations of a variety of legal provisions in Iraq?
Ensuring the effective participation of minority members through the media
is a key way to achieve a pluralistic approach that goes beyond their soft
integration mechanisms.
It is the state's responsibility to distinguish between freedom of expression
and the prohibition of any negative expression towards minorities, especially
the expression that constitutes a crime under international law obligations, that
justifies a complaint, or that violates the principle of respect for others.
However, what's frustrating in Iraq is how much hate speech is ignored on the
pretext that it is not criminalized at the national level or that it is tolerated
because of how constitutional provisions are interpreted.
Hate speech against minorities must be clearly criminalized by law, and the
criminalization must be linked to screening through non-routine criteria that
look at the context, content and expression of the speaker's intent, relevant
impact and the extent of the harm as well as an indication of whether it
constitutes an imminent danger.
While digital media has enabled members of minorities to participate in media
discourse more broadly, it has provided more access for extremist and violent
organizations or groups in Iraq to spread hate speech or incite violence against
minorities.
Minority women also experience double the pressures of exclusion and
missed opportunities due to their exposure to double levels of discriminatory
hate speech.