University of Minnesota Law School
Item 5: Steps Forward
Thank you. The meetings of this forum have clearly highlighted that minorities are the
target of content inciting hate and violence. However, where a government cannot be
relied upon to apply the law without discrimination, and there is the possibility of the
law being used to repress the very groups it allegedly seeks to protect, the solution to
hate speech cannot be governmental regulation alone.
In Sri Lanka, the government and its political proxies are the primary producers of
hate speech. The government also fails to control hate speech against minorities on
social media. Further, the content-regulating laws are applied unequally. People from
minority communities have been arrested when they verbally counter Buddhist
extremism, but the Sri Lanka Telecommunication Commission has not investigated a
single Buddhist monk for their hate speech against minority communities. The
strategic and intentional fear created by arbitrary arrests heightens the climate of fear
and self-censorship.
Going forward, actions by international and transnational organizations in various
capacities, including that of watchdogs, will be essential. There must be consistent
standards, including on sexualized violence on online platforms. External monitors
and companies must be independent from the government. They should engage with
local communities to ensure that control of hate speech does not result in a backlash.
Social media companies have a central role to play by building capacity to more
effectively manage social media content in Sri Lanka, especially around gender-based
violence. Facebook and other social media platforms should invest in resources and
expertise in all local languages and vernacular so as to protect the linguistic minority
against content inciting hate and also, make a commitment to responding quickly to
hate speech.
Thank you for including civil society in this forum. We recommend that companies
and international organizations continue to consult and engage with civil society
actors and human rights defenders, especially minorities at the local level who are
most directly impacted by hate speech on social media.