The Office of the Ombudsman is more visible and well known than ever before. The CA team was told of
A number of awareness raising activities are being undertaken such as legal literacy workshops for NGOs
topic, as well as the information the office makes publicly available via its website.
needs to develop, and the capacity gap of 0.57 identified in the questionnaire was the second largest of all
this gap, raising a number of areas the office needs to address. Once again, the overriding issues were of
staffing and resources. Without specialist staff there is reported to be little ability to undertake effective
awareness raising and communications, including developing good media relations.
F i n a l R e p o r t : O f f i c e o f t h e O m b u d s m a n o f U z b e k i s t a n C a p a c i t y A s s e s s m e n t
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146.
A further consequence is that often the work of the office does not receive the coverage it deserves. The CA
team heard of some excellent examples of complaints resolutions, court interventions and the two recent
special reports (on birth registrations and places of detention) that had not been made as widely publicly
available as possible because of the lack of internal communications staff and expertise.
“They have to be more visible. They report to Parliament but they need to report to the people. Maybe
you could recommend them to be more active.” External stakeholder
147.
Staff and regional representatives also spoke about the lack of promotional materials, such as pamphlets,
posters and videos and how that impacted their ability to raise awareness in the course of their work.
148.
Despite the increasing awareness of the Office of the Ombudsman, the CA team was told of a widespread
lack of understanding of the role of the office and of human rights in general.
In the districts – there is... no understanding of human rights and entitlements among the population.
149.
Two consequences of this knowledge gap were communicated during the focus groups. The first is that
without a basic understanding of human rights and responsibilities there is no national consciousness which
leads to respect and fulfilment of rights being demanded and better respected. The second, linked to the
first, was that as a result of not understanding the role of the office nor general concepts of human rights,
staff spend considerable time dealing with issues that do not fall within the mandate of the office.
150.
Feedback from the NGOs during the CA was reasonably clear. The office is starting to become more visible
but it needs to secure the required resources and increase its activities in this area. They also made the point
that awareness raising is not just a one-way information process - that through its promotional work the
office will be better connected to the communities and state agencies, providing more information on human
rights issues and potential approaches.
“He should organise more press conferences, more events. It would provide them more information and
more ideas.”
Paris Principles
A national institution shall... have the following responsibilities; (g) To publicize human rights and
efforts to combat all forms of discrimination, in particular racial discrimination, by increasing public
awareness, especially through information and education and by making use of all press organs.
Recommendations
151.
Aside from implementing the recommendations contained elsewhere in the CA report to develop the
human and financial resources to better promote human rights the office should also develop a full costed
communications plan and seek to continuously raise the profile of the office.
152.
The development of a communications plan would allow the office to analyse its audiences, design specific
approaches, identify and plan activities and codify the office’s commitment to linking human rights and
Uzbek culture.
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