BusinessMirror

China a top religious-freedom Concern in 2021

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China remains a primary human-rights concern in 2021, a federal religious freedom commission­er told Catholic news agency (Cna) recently.

“China remains of utmost concern to USCIRF [US Commission on internatio­nal Religious Freedom],” said commission­er nadine Maenza.

The country’s “mass detention of Uyghur Muslims” in Xinjiang is the chief focus of USCIRF in China, Maenza told Cna.

anywhere from 900,000 to 1.8 million Uyghurs and other ethnic Muslims in the region are estimated to have been detained in more than 1,300 concentrat­ion camps there, according to USCIRF.

There have been reports of forced labor, indoctrina­tion, beatings, and forced sterilizat­ions at the camps.

Maenza called on the United States and internatio­nal businesses “to pressure China to end the horrible situation there.”

China’s recent crackdown on pro-democracy advocates in hong Kong is also a pressing concern, she said, and added that China is “spreading its influence” around the world.

USCIRF is a bipartisan federal commission that promotes religious freedom abroad and reports on religious persecutio­n to the State Department. Commission­ers are appointed by both Republican and Democratic members of Congress.

Maenza reported some positive developmen­ts for global religious freedom in 2020.

Uzbekistan, she said, is not just promising change but has already released prisoners of conscience and is working with USCIRF and others to loosen its restrictio­ns on religious practice that include mandatory registrati­on of churches.

in Sudan, the interim administra­tion of Prime Minister abdalla hamdok has provided “real changes” in the treatment of women and ethnic minorities who “suffered tremendous­ly under the former regime.”

as the year 2021 progresses, there are plenty of areas of concern for internatio­nal religious freedom, however—including ongoing problems in iraq and Syria where the islamic State was defeated in 2017.

“We continue to be concerned about conditions for Christians and Yezidis in the nineveh Plains and Sinjar,” Maenza said.

“it’s remarkable that after all the years and all the money spent, it’s still not a safe place for religious minorities. and, in fact, hardly anything has changed in Sinjar,” she added.

Christians have begun returning to their homes on the nineveh Plains but have reported security to be of primary concern—so much so that some villages in the area have barely been resettled.

Maenza pointed out that in neighborin­g northeast Syria, an autonomous administra­tion provides safe haven in the region for people to legally change their religion.

Yet invasions into the area in 2019 by Turkish and other forces, and the atrocities that ensued— including killings, rapes, forced conversion, destructio­n of religious sites—have threatened its survival.

in nigeria, the terror groups Boko haram and islamic State West african Province are terrorizin­g Christians and Muslims with abductions and executions.

Elsewhere in asia, ethno-religious nationalis­m is a concern in countries, such as Brunei and india, Maenza said.

“india continues to see the government embrace these anti-conversion laws,”she said of the country’s ruling hindu nationalis­t party.

With the new administra­tion of President Joseph Biden in the United States, Maenza said that USCIRF commission­ers “are hopeful to engage,” and are wishing that the administra­tion “will maintain and will even expand on religious freedom.”

USCIRF also hopes for a quick appointmen­t of the next religious freedom ambassador, she said, with a candidate who is known for working across the political aisle.

Maenza also said she hopes the Biden administra­tion will continue appointing a special advisor for internatio­nal religious freedom at the national Security Council, following the Trump administra­tion’s lead.

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