The Star Malaysia

UN official: Most of world lacks real religious freedom

-

NEW YORK: Three-quarters of the world’s people live in countries that either restrict the right to religion or belief or have “a high level of social hostility involving religion or belief ”, the UN special investigat­or on religious rights said.

Ahmed Shaheed told the General Assembly’s human rights committee on Tuesday that religious intoleranc­e is prevalent globally – and rising around the world.

He said over 70 countries currently have anti-blasphemy laws that can be used to suppress dissenting views, in violation of internatio­nal human rights standards.

Shaheed, a former politician and human rights expert from the Maldives, urged those countries to repeal the blasphemy laws.

He also called for the repeal of all laws that undermine the exercise of the right to freedom of religion or belief – or discrimina­te against that right.

Shaheed urged countries to adopt and enforce “adequate criminal sanctions penalising violent and particular­ly egregious discrimina­tory acts perpetrate­d by state or non-state actors against persons based on their religion or belief ”.

He said government­s must also pay “particular attention” to uphold the obligation to protect religious minorities.

“Increases in unlawful government restrictio­ns against religious groups remain one of the primary and most fundamenta­l factors resulting in higher levels of religious intoleranc­e in any given society,” Shaheed said.

Some forms of discrimina­tion are direct, such as prohibitin­g some or all religions or beliefs, he said.

But others may be indirect, like zoning laws that prevent constructi­on of certain houses of worship or bans on refugees or immigrants, “ostensibly for national security reasons, from countries where majority population­s belong to particular faith communitie­s”, he said.

The special investigat­or, or rapporteur, on freedom of religion or belief is an independen­t expert appointed by the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council.

Shaheed previously served for almost six years as special rapporteur on the human rights situation in Iran. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia