ASSYRIAN UNIVERSAL ALLIANCE
Member, Unrepresented Nations & Peoples Organization (UNPO)
United Nations Forum on Minority Issues
November 27-28, 2012
Jennifer Babaie
Committee on International Organizations
Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities: identifying positive practices and opportunities.
Consideration of future opportunities and initiatives for raising awareness of the Declaration
and ensuring its practical implementation
Madam Chair, distinguished delegates:
The current situation of the Assyrians in Iraq is a testament to the need of a particularized focus on security
measures in post-conflict situations that pay special attention to the risks facing minority populations. The
Assyrians, an ethnic, linguistic, and religious minority, indigenous to the Middle East, once represented a strong
Christian population in the region, however decades of sectarian conflict and war have caused the population to
dwindle to a mere fraction of its original size.
As a result, the once diverse population of countries such as Iraq has become more homogenous, giving rise to a
distinct fear in the Assyrian community to express their cultural and religious identity, and reinforcing the
perception of assimilation as the key to peaceful living. The community is forced to choose between cultural
expression and safety, a decision which hinders any effective expression of a collective identity for our people.
The Declaration could have given voice to important rights for the Assyrians and important responsibilities for
the new government of Iraq, however this did not occur, and the example is now one of a missed opportunity.
Our hope is that the current challenges faced by minorities in that country can serve as a learning experience for
the international communtiy, so that in the future, minorities trapped in post-conflict situations will not be
robbed of the chance to secure their rights.
Our recommendations concerning post-conflict security of minority groups are as follows:
1. To Support the recommendation made earlier to have a UN conference hosted among the MENA countries to
reinforce the values of the Declaration, with special attentiont to Articles 5 and 6.
2. To Develop a mechanism for including the Declaration as an essential drafting tool in all future constitutional
draftings that would allow the Independent Expert to utilize her mandate to formally consult with government
ministries and minority groups on the relevancy of the Declaration whenever new constitutions are being
proposed post-conflict. The creation of a more methodical approach to the use of the Declaration will assist in
taking the rights contained in the document beyond merely ‘soft’ international law by allowings its values to
become ingrained in the municipal laws of member states, thus giving minority groups direct access to future
claims and reperations for potential violations and abuses of their rights.
3. To Include in Paragraph 23 of the Recommendations specific language regarding the right of minorities to be
free from the impunity of those who violate their basic rights by inciting or participating in acts of violence.
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