Los Angeles Times

U.S. decries Saudi, Chinese limits on religious freedom

- By Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com Twitter: @TracyKWilk­inson

WASHINGTON — U.S. ally Saudi Arabia continued to torture, execute and discrimina­te against minority Shiite Muslims last year, according to the State Department, but the Trump administra­tion followed the Obama administra­tion and has granted the Sunni-ruled kingdom an exemption from sanctions normally placed on countries with bad records on religious freedom.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo unveiled the annual report on internatio­nal religious liberty on Tuesday, the first issued by the Trump administra­tion. He called religious freedom, which is a key concern for a significan­t portion of President Trump’s political base, the administra­tion’s top priority in human rights.

The issue becomes tricky when key allies or strategic partners such as Saudi Arabia and China restrict faith practices, especially of minority population­s.

“Religious freedom deserves to be a front-burner issue,” Pompeo said. “Know that we are working in countries around the world to ensure that religious freedom remains the case, and where it is not, that it becomes so.”

Pompeo and Sam Brownback, the U.S. ambassador at large for internatio­nal religious freedom, announced plans to invite what they called “like-minded” foreign ministers to a July 25-26 conference to discuss religious liberty and persecutio­n.

It will be first ministeria­llevel conference that Pompeo, an evangelica­l Christian, will host. He said that was intended to underscore the importance he attaches to the issue.

Brownback would not disclose whether Saudi Arabia will be invited, saying that the list of attendees would be made public later and that he was encouraged by recent Saudi reforms. The kingdom has been granted an exemption from sanctions since at least 2011 for reasons of national security.

The report denounces egregious repression in North Korea, including the killings or disappeara­nces of nearly 200 people last year, and the existence of what Brownback called “gulag” camps that hold 80,000 to 120,000 “political prisoners,” some jailed for religious reasons.

China continued to imprison members of religious minorities, including Uighur Muslims and people in the Falun Gong spiritual movement, and many die in custody, the report says.

Hundreds of thousands of Uighur Muslims were put in “reeducatio­n camps” and are subject to “invasive surveillan­ce,” the report says. Beijing considers many of the Uighurs to be extremists.

China’s treatment of Tibetan Buddhists has also deteriorat­ed and was “very, very troubling,” Brownback said. The report cites a string of self-immolation­s by Tibetans in protest.

Like Saudi Arabia, China was designated a “country of particular concern.” Unlike Saudi Arabia, China is under sanctions that the administra­tion renewed in December, including a ban on U.S. exports of crime control and surveillan­ce equipment.

The continued exemption for Saudi Arabia is “particular­ly troublesom­e,” said Sarah Margon, Washington director of Human Rights Watch. Few of the recently announced reforms, she noted, have been enacted.

“Religious freedom is unquestion­ably an important issue, but it is not an uncontrove­rsial one,” Margon said, “especially given this administra­tion’s history of using language that is intolerant and discrimina­tory.”

At least in public, Trump has minimized U.S. concerns about human rights abuses in his meetings with autocrats, including Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Sisi. State Department programs on women’s rights, reproducti­ve rights and similar issues have been scrapped or marginaliz­ed since Trump took office.

Brownback denied that the administra­tion was elevating religious freedom to the exclusion of other human rights concerns.

“This is a foundation­al human right,” Brownback said. “You do religious freedom and a whole series of better human rights come out of it.”

Brownback said the ethnic cleansing of Muslim Rohingya persists in Myanmar and has worsened.

The report uses generally neutral language to discuss restrictio­ns on non-Orthodox Jews by the Israeli government. It has promised recognitio­n and coed praying at the Western Wall but has not acted on it.

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