April 29, 2010
Religious Freedom Group Sees Rise In Persecution
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty correspondent Heather Maher
in Washington
A new report from the
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom warns that religious freedom
across the globe is increasingly being threatened and oppressed by governments
in human rights "hot spots."
In 2009, the group --
an independent U.S. government commission that monitors religious freedom
worldwide -- surveyed 28 such countries and found evidence that freedom of
religion was "being obstructed and trampled."
This year's list
includes 13 "countries of particular concern," including all eight
named last year (Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan,
and Uzbekistan) plus Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, and Vietnam.
The commission makes
policy recommendations to the U.S. president, secretary of state, and Congress
that are aimed at improving conditions in what it calls "that small but
critically important point of intersection of foreign policy, national
security, and international religious freedom standards."
After researchers and
analysts document the laws, practices, and policies in places that prevent
people from worshiping freely and without fear of persecution, the group issues
an annual report aimed at "exposing, countering, and correcting religious
freedom abuses."
Cathy Cosman, a
senior policy analyst at the commission, says the findings show that
restricting religious worship has become an important tool for repressive
governments to hold onto power.
"If one assumes
that the governments are primarily concerned with retaining their power and
remaining in office, then they have engaged in systematically restricting the
public influence of civil society in various ways, and then of course also
[restricting] the media," Cosman says. "If one thinks of other
potential groups that [have] the ability to mobilise large numbers of people,
it [is] religious communities that are more or less the only groups that are left."
The report identifies
what it calls "disturbing" trends in threats to freedom of religion
around the world.
It cites evidence of
the "exportation of extremist ideology," as in Saudi Arabia's
dissemination of educational materials that the group says "instill hate
and incite violence throughout the world."
It also finds states
that are persecuting political opponents in the name of religion under
blasphemy and apostasy laws, such as in Iran.
And it documents
several examples of state-sponsored repression of religion.
According to the
report, in Vietnam, people are imprisoned for reasons directly related to their
exercise or advocacy of freedom of belief or religion; the government of
"Egypt denies Baha'is, Coptic Christians, and other religious minorities
basic rights; North Korea bans virtually all worship and imprisons in its labor
camps even the grandchildren of people caught praying; and China seriously
restricts religious activities, church governance, and places of worship."
For the first time in
its 11 years of reporting on religious freedom around the world, the group has
called on the U.S. government to impose a visa ban on and freeze the U.S.
assets of one individual: Ramzan Kadyrov, the president of Chechnya.
The group says the
action is justified by Kadyrov's "leadership the Chechen armed forces,
which the European Court of Human Rights has found [to be] involved in severe
human rights abuses."
Cosman says in former
communist Europe and Central Asia, governments seem increasingly
willing to try and
gain influence over citizens' very thoughts.
"I think that
this is an expression of the most Soviet impulses of the government of [this]
part of the world, where they want to control what people think, and how they
think," Cosman says. "And increasingly,
they're acting on it."
She adds that, along
with Russia, some Central Asian countries have recently widened the category of
religious activities they feel justified in persecuting people for.
"The Uzbeks keep
changing and expanding their definition of so-called religious extremism, so
that now people who read the materials of a Turkish theologian called Said
Nursi are viewed as engaging in extremist activities and unfortunately, that
trend is also seen in Tajikistan and Russia," Cosman says.
The commission says
it works closely with President Barack Obama's administration to make policy
recommendations on how Washington can promote religious freedom through U.S.
foreign policy channels.
But the White House
did not officially accept the 2009 findings or named the specified countries as
violators of religious rights. Neither did the administration of President
George W. Bush between November 2006 and January 2009.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom on
RFE/RL Broadcast Countries
Afghanistan
"In Afghanistan,
conditions for religious freedom remain problematic, despite gains in freedom
of religion or belief since the ouster of the Taliban regime in late 2001. The
lack of effective government authority outside of Kabul and major provincial
centers contributes to a deteriorating situation for religious freedom and
other related human rights in many areas of the country. The government's
inclination to accommodate traditional, restrictive views of human rights,
specifically regarding women, was demonstrated in the controversy over a new
family or personal status law for Shi'a Muslims. Nascent efforts at national
reconciliation could potentially return Taliban or other insurgents hostile to
international human rights standards to positions of influence."
Belarus
"Harsh religious
freedom conditions in Belarus continued during the reporting period. The
Belarusian government still restricts religious freedom under its 2002 religion
law. Authorities
harassed and fined
members of certain religious groups, particularly Protestants. Foreign
missionaries, clergy, and humanitarian workers affiliated with churches faced
increased restrictions, including deportation and visa refusal or cancellation.
Close supervision of religious life is state policy under the religion law, and
an extensive government apparatus has stepped up efforts to limit the influence
of religion and the activities of foreign religious workers."
Iran
"The government
of Iran continues to engage in systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of
religious freedom,
including prolonged detention, torture, and executions based primarily or
entirely upon the religion of the accused. During the past year, and
particularly since the June 2009 elections, the Iranian government's poor religious
freedom record deteriorated, especially for religious minorities, in particular
Baha'is as well as Christians and Sufi Muslims, including intensified physical
attacks, harassment, detention, arrests, and imprisonment. Dissident Muslims
were increasingly subject to abuse and several were sentenced to death and even
executed for the capital crime of moharebeh,
or 'waging war against God.' A revised penal code that would codify serious
punishments, including the death penalty, on converts from Islam remains under
consideration by the Iranian parliament. Heightened antisemitism and repeated
Holocaust denial by senior government officials have increased fear among
Iran's Jewish community. Since the 1979
Iranian revolution, members of minority religious communities have fled Iran in
significant numbers for fear of persecution."
Iraq
"In Iraq, the
government continues to commit and tolerate severe abuses of freedom of
religion or belief, particularly against the members of Iraq's smallest, most
vulnerable religious minorities - Chaldo-Assyrian and other Christians, Sabean
Mandaeans, and Yazidis. Members of these
groups continue to suffer from targeted violence, threats, and intimidation,
against which they receive insufficient government protection. They also
experience a pattern of official discrimination, marginalisation, and neglect.
In addition, there continue to be attacks and tense relations between Shi'a and
Sunni Iraqis. Other egregious, religiously motivated violence against women and
girls, homosexuals, and Muslims who reject certain strict interpretations of
Islam also continues."
Pakistan
"Serious
religious freedom concerns persist in Pakistan, where religiously
discriminatory legislation has fostered an atmosphere of intolerance. Positive
steps taken by the current government have failed to reverse the resulting
erosion in the social and legal status of members of religious minority
communities and the ability of members of the majority Muslim community to
discuss freely sensitive religious and social issues. A number of Pakistan's
laws abridge freedom of religion or belief. Blasphemy laws have been used to
silence members of religious minorities and dissenters within the majority
Muslim community, and frequently result in imprisonment on account of religion
or belief and/or vigilante violence. The Hudood
Ordinances, Islamic decrees predominantly affecting women that are enforced
alongside Pakistan's secular legal system, provide harsh punishments for
alleged violations of Islamic law. Anti-government insurgents espousing an
intolerant interpretation of Islam continue to impose a harsh, Taliban-style
rule in areas under their control. The government's response to sectarian and
religiously motivated violence continues to be inadequate, despite increased
security operations against extremists."
Russia
"The status of
religious freedom in Russia continued to deteriorate due to several negative
new policies and trends, particularly government use of anti-extremist
legislation against religious groups that are not known to use or advocate
violence. National and local government officials increasingly violate the
religious freedoms of Muslims and groups they view as non-traditional by
enforcing other laws, including those on religious organisations and non-governmental
organisations. Russian officials continue to describe certain religious and
other groups as alien to Russian culture and society, thereby contributing to a
climate of intolerance. Continued high
levels of xenophobia and intolerance, including antisemitism, have resulted in
violent, sometimes lethal, hate crimes. The Russian government has chronically
failed to address these serious problems adequately, consistently, or
effectively. The U.S. government should urge Russia to reform its overly broad
law on extremism and other laws negatively affecting human rights and freedom
of religion or belief, so as to ensure that they are not used to limit the
fundamental freedoms of peaceful religious groups."
Tajikistan
"Religious
freedom conditions in Tajikistan have deteriorated significantly over the past
several years, as Tajik law and government policies place major restrictions on
religious freedom. These restrictions primarily affect Muslims, but also single
out minority religious communities. In 2009, the Tajik government passed a new
religion law that codified some restrictions that had been informally
implemented and introduced a framework for further restrictions. Also in 2009,
a court ordered a Protestant church to vacate its building and its property was
expropriated by the Dushanbe city government. Tajik authorities demolished
several mosques in 2007, and in 2008 one church and the nation's only synagogue
were bulldozed. Bans imposed in 2007 continued on Jehovah's Witnesses and two
Protestant churches."
Turkmenistan
"Significant
religious freedom problems and official harassment of religious adherents
persist in Turkmenistan. Police raids and other forms of harassment of
registered and unregistered religious groups continue more than three years after
the death of longtime dictator Saparmurat Niyazov. The repressive 2003 religion
law remains in force, imposing major difficulties for the legal functioning of
religious groups. Despite decreased emphasis, the Turkmen government still
maintains the former president's personality cult through the Ruhnama as a
mandatory feature of elementary public education. Although the new president
has taken some isolated positive steps, including the release of the country's
former chief mufti, promised systemic legal reforms directly related to
religious freedom and other human rights have not been made."
Uzbekistan
"The government
of Uzbekistan continues to systematically abuse religious freedom and related
human rights throughout the country. The government exercises tight control
over all religious practice, and continues to arrest Muslims and close mosques
that do not conform to government-prescribed practices or that it alleges are
associated with extremist political programs. As of 2009, at least 4,500 non-conforming
Muslims, including an increasing numbers of women, were estimated to be in
prison, many of whom reportedly are denied the right to due process and
subjected to torture. Official repression has extended to members of the
country's small Protestant and Jehovah's Witnesses communities that until
recently had been somewhat shielded from the government's anti-religious
campaign. Uzbekistan has a highly restrictive law on religion that severely
limits the ability of religious communities to function, leaving more than 100
religious groups currently denied registration."