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A Ten-Point Plan for Reducing Hate Crimes
- Acknowledge and condemn violent hate crimes whenever they
occur. Senior government leaders should send a strong and
immediate political signal that violent crimes which appear to be
motivated by prejudice and intolerance will be investigated thoroughly
and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
- Enact laws that expressly address hate crimes.
Governments should recognize hate crimes as the more serious
crimes that they are while defining categories of bias motivation
broadly. They should enact laws that provide enhanced penalties for
crimes committed because of the victim's race, religion, ethnicity,
gender, sexual orientation, mental and physical disabilities, or other
similar forms of discrimination.
- Strengthen enforcement and prosecute offenders.
Governments should ensure that those responsible for hate crimes are
held accountable under the law, that the enforcement of hate crime laws
is a priority for the criminal justice system, and that the record of
their enforcement is well documented and publicized.
- Provide adequate resources to law enforcement
bodies. Governments should ensure that police and investigators
- as the first responders in cases of violent crime - have the resources
and training to detect bias motives, and that prosecutors have been
trained to apply the legal measures required to prosecute hate crimes.
- Undertake parliamentary or other special inquiries into the
problem of hate crimes. Such official inquiries should
investigate ways to better respond to hate crimes, but also seek
creative ways to deal with the roots of intolerance through education.
- Monitor and report on hate crimes. Governments
should establish or strengthen official systems of monitoring and
reporting to provide accurate data, including on the victim groups
targeted, for informed policy decisions to combat intolerance. These
monitoring systems should include improved access to complaints
procedures by individual victims and advocacy groups through the
introduction of measures such as third party reporting.
- Create and strengthen antidiscrimination bodies.
Official antidiscrimination and human rights bodies should have the
authority to address hate crimes through monitoring, reporting, and
assistance to victims.
- Reach out to community groups. Governments need to
take steps to increase the confidence of minority communities by
demonstrating a willingness to work more closely with human rights and
community-based organizations in the reporting and registration of hate
crimes and on measures to provide equal protection for all under the
law.
- Speak out against official intolerance and bigotry.
Freedom of speech allows considerable latitude for offensive and hateful
speech, but public figures should be held to a higher standard. Members
of parliament and local government leaders should be held politically
accountable for bigoted words that encourage xenophobia and violence and
create a climate of fear for minorities.
- Encourage international cooperation on hate crimes.
Governments should support and strengthen the mandates of
intergovernmental organizations - like the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the European Commission against Racism and
Intolerance, and the Fundamental Rights Agency - that are addressing
discrimination. Governments should also provide a detailed
accounting on the incidence and nature of hate crimes to these bodies in
accordance with political and other commitments.
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