Prominent international bodies frequently report on discriminatory violence,
based on such grounds as colour, association with a national minority, religion
or sexual orientation, in various countries.1 This type of wrongful conduct is
also popularly referred to as ‘hate crime’, meaning ‘violence directed toward
groups of people who generally are not valued by the majority society, who
suffer discrimination in other arenas, and who do not have full access to institutions
meant to remedy social, political and economic injustice’.2
In recent years, several events linked to discriminatory violence occurred
that have had consequences reaching far beyond the territory of a single nation
or continent. The global economic and humanitarian crisis caused an influx of
migrants and refugees crossing into Europe. Violent conflicts in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Syria, as well as poverty in some other countries, incited individuals
to travel to safer and more prosperous environments