The New Zealand Herald

We strongly support right to freedom of speech

- Paula Tesoriero is the acting Chief Human Rights Commission­er.

Iam concerned at recurring speculatio­n that the Human Rights Commission is campaignin­g to limit free speech. Those who hold this view say we want to ban “disharmoni­ous” or hate speech aimed at certain religions, and to make such comments an offence.

They say we intend to do this in a way that specifical­ly advantages Muslims while disadvanta­ging other members of our community, particular­ly those who practise different religions.

Let me be quite clear. There is no such campaign. We do not want, and are not calling for, a ban on speech directed at those who are Muslim.

What we do want is respectful and informed discussion about our current legal frameworks and considerat­ion about whether they are “fit for purpose”, particular­ly in the age of the internet and changing demographi­cs.

The commission has no fixed view about whether any specific law change is necessary or required. But we do have a role in reflecting community questions and concerns and we believe that debate and discourse about all human rights are important in our society. We raised some of these issues in a 2017 submission to the United Nations committee that oversees the Convention on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion.

By way of context, people ask us why the “exciting racial disharmony” provisions of the Human Rights Act apply to some groups and not others. We are also asked why people who complain to the commission under these provisions are offered mediation but are not able to obtain a decision or finding from us about the substance of their complaint.

The answer is we do not have decisionma­king or investigat­ive jurisdicti­on in relation to these cases, nor any other individual discrimina­tion complaint.

At times we get asked about the apparent anomalies between the scope and nature of the Harmful Digital Communicat­ions Act and the relevant provisions of the Human Rights Act. These are all good questions — they deserve considerat­ion and discussion.

We have also been criticised in some quarters for arguing in a recent legal case that a very high threshold should be applied when the court is considerin­g potential breaches of existing racial disharmony laws.

The reason the commission took this stance is that we strongly support the right to freedom of speech and expression and believe that there should be legal consequenc­es only for cases at the most serious end of the spectrum. Words or conduct that offend, upset or hurt people’s feelings are not of themselves going to fall into this category.

But rights are not absolute and they do not exist in isolation. Individual­s have a right to freedom of speech but they also have a right to be physically safe irrespecti­ve of personal characteri­stics such as ethnicity, colour, age, religion, disability, sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

Sometimes finding the right balance is difficult. And people have many different views on where the line should be drawn. But we need to keep discussing and debating the issues, and we need to do so in a respectful, dignified and informed manner.

We do not want, and are not calling for, a ban on speech directed at those who are Muslim.

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