WASHINGTON
(RNS) It can be hard to come up with a list of countries with the most egregious
records on religious freedom when some of the world's worst offenders aren’t
even nation states.
For
its annual report of violators, the U.S. Commission on International Religious
Freedom counts 15 nations where abuse of religious liberty is “systemic,
egregious, and ongoing.”
But the commission, which was created
by Congress in 1998 as an independent watchdog panel, also wants to highlight
the crimes of non-nations, which for the first time this year get their own
section in the report.
"USCIRF added a special emphasis on
non-state actors, as their violent actions are a growing threat to religious
freedom," said Knox Thames, the commission's director of policy and research.
"Violence perpetrated by non-state
actors against religious minorities and others who conflict with their world
view is increasingly common, with incidents occurring in places as diverse as
Pakistan and Nigeria."
Somalia, for example, which doesn’t
make the list, is home to al-Shabaab, a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist
organization that has brutally suppressed Christians and Sufi Muslims who do not
subscribe to its radical interpretation of Islam.
“Somalis accused of committing crimes
or who al-Shabaab deems to have deviated from accepted behaviors are punished
through stoning, amputation, flogging, and/or detention,” according to the
report.
On its 15-nation list of the worse
offenders, USCIRF includes eight that the U.S. State Department also considers
“Countries of Particular Concern”: Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea,
Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan.
But as in years past, the commission
wants the State Department to add seven more: Egypt, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Vietnam.
This year's USCIRF list is one
country smaller than it was in 2012. Gone is Turkey, whose addition caused an
uproar among Turks who called the designation unfounded and damaging to USCIRF’s
reputation.
Orthodox Christians welcomed the 2012
designation after years of arguing that Turkey -- home to Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew, spiritual leader of the world’s 250 million Orthodox Christians --
continues to shutter their seminary in that country and withholds legal status
from many religious groups.
Thames said the commission’s decision
against designating Turkey as a “country of particular concern” this year was
unanimous.
The nation can point to a genuine
loosening of restrictions on religious communities, but “nevertheless,” the
report concludes, “the Turkish government’s interpretation of secularism
requires absolute state control over all aspects of religion in the public
sphere.”
But the decision to "promote" Turkey
to a country "to be monitored" struck several commissioners as too
lenient.
Last year, it was “an error to place
Turkey among the world’s worst violators of religious freedom,” four of eight
commissioners wrote in a dissent included in this year’s report. “But this year’s designation has
erred in the opposite direction.”
The dissenters want it to be
designated a “Tier 2” country, just below the most concerning 15.
KRE/AMB END MARKOE
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Thursday, May 2, 2013
15 countries cited for religious freedom violations--TURKEY IN THE 2ND TIER
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