Item VII. Concluding remarks
In her closing remarks, the Chair of the fifth session of the Forum on Minority Issues,
Ms. Soyata Maiga, underlined that, through the wealth of presentations and proposals for
recommendations received from all participants during this session of the Forum, all of
the rights in the Declaration had been the subject of a very complex, critical and detailed
analysis. She particularly welcomed the sharing of experiences from persons belonging to
minorities themselves and the examples of challenges that they face but also the faith and
hope that they had demonstrated for the future. She recalled that, in spite of the twenty
years of existence of the Declaration, it has not actually delivered everything that it could
and therefore it must be nurtured and consolidated through a collective and renewed
commitment supporting the promotion and protection of all rights of persons belonging to
minorities. She underlined that this goes hand in hand with the implementation of
regional human rights instruments that also guarantee the rights of persons belonging to
minorities. Among the main challenges that are being faced by all stakeholders, she
pointed to the deficit in understanding and actual ownership of the Declaration by
minorities themselves, the lack of legal recognition of the existence of minorities in
numerous places and the insufficient integration of the Declaration’s principles in
national legislation. She therefore stressed the need for institutionalisation of this Forum
and for all stakeholders to attach more importance to the full implementation of its
recommendations inter alia through the adoption of new legislation, policies and plans
tailored to the needs of minorities. In conclusion, she emphasised that all of the rights
contained in the Declaration are important and must be respected but that special
attention is required on education, on the promotion and respect for linguistic rights as
well as elements of the cultural identity of persons belonging to minorities.
In her concluding remarks, the Independent Expert on minority issues, Ms Rita Izsák,
stressed that all contributions heard during the Forum would greatly inform her work. She
welcomed the examples of good practices in all regions that demonstrated the attention
that Governments and other stakeholders are giving to minority issues. She also
welcomed the examples of remaining challenges that served as reminders of the need for
better implementation of the Declaration. She called on all participants to continue the
dialogue initiated during the Forum throughout the year as the recommendations that it
produces can only fulfil their potential when they are translated into action in countries
and localities where the challenges involving minorities exist. She concluded by
emphasising that implementation of minority rights require dialogue, consultation,
understanding and sometimes compromise.
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