Feb 3, 2015

FOR YOUR INFORMATION

February 3, 2015 | By Katrina Lantos Swett & M. Zuhdi Jasser

The following op-ed appeared in The Huffington Post on February 3, 2015

What did the terrorist attacks against the Charlie Hebdo newspaper and the kosher supermarket in Paris share with the flogging of Saudi blogger Raif Badawi in Jeddah last month? Each was an assault on freedom of conscience, religion, or belief. Moreover, in the Charlie Hebdo and Badawi cases, those responsible denied their victims the right to speak freely about religion because, in their view, such critics are blasphemers who insult religion and must be punished.

People naturally should try to do their utmost to honor and uphold each other's inherent dignity as fellow human beings and respect their most cherished beliefs. But when this laudable idea is rejected by a demand that perceived transgressors be silenced by force -- including even murder and torture -- rather than engaged through debate and discussion, the line has been crossed from freedom to coercion.

As the Badawi case illustrates, it is not just private individuals and groups which cross that line. Governments also label and punish certain speech by enforcing blasphemy laws, some of which carry the death penalty. In so doing, they embolden citizens to commit bloodshed against alleged blasphemers.

In the face of this assault on human rights and dignity, the world community must confront these abusive laws and the horrific acts they unleash, pressing offending nations to repeal these statutes and release people imprisoned because of them.

As Badawi can attest, one such nation is Saudi Arabia. The Kingdom enthrones its own interpretation of Sunni Islam and bans the public expression of any other religious belief. Dissenters may be charged with offenses ranging from apostasy to blasphemy.

Badawi founded and edited the Free Saudi Liberals website, a forum for the free expression of diverse political and religious views. The government arrested him in June 2012, charging him with apostasy and "insulting Islam." While in January 2013, a Saudi court dropped the apostasy charge, it sentenced him in July 2013 to 600 lashes and seven years in prison on other charges and ordered that his web site be shut down. Last May, an appeals court increased the sentence to 10 years and the number of lashes to 1,000, or 50 lashes weekly for 20 consecutive weeks. Badawi's latest flogging has been postponed and the Saudi high court is reviewing his case.

While Saudi Arabia punishes dissenters from its interpretation of Sunni Islam, Iran does likewise to those it deems to threaten its own brand of Shi'a Islam. Muslims, including Shi'a dissenters, and non-Muslims including Baha'is and Christians, who have been jailed, tortured, and executed for "insulting Islam" or "waging war against God."

But when it comes to the application of blasphemy provisions, no nation is more zealous than Pakistan. While these laws largely target Muslims and carry the death penalty or life in prison, they disproportionately impact religious minority communities. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, on which we serve, knows of at least 17 Pakistanis on death row and 19 more serving life sentences for blasphemy, with many more awaiting trial.

Pakistan's blasphemy statutes also fan the flames of skyrocketing sectarian violence and provide extremist groups and vigilantes fuel to unleash terror, especially against minorities, with impunity.

No Pakistanis are safe from these laws, not even government officials. In 2011, Shabbaz Bhatti -- Pakistan's minority religious affairs minister and a Christian, and Salmaan Taseer -- the governor of Punjab province and a Muslim, were assassinated for opposing these laws. Reacting to mere allegations of blasphemy, mobs recently lynched a Christian man and his pregnant wife, while a policeman used an axe to kill a Shi'a in custody.

Clearly, the world community must respond to these abuses.

In March 2011, the United States and like-minded countries blocked efforts at the United Nations to internationalize blasphemy prohibitions, defeating an initiative that promoted an international legal norm against the so-called "defamation of religions." Instead, a framework that promotes tolerance, understanding, and community engagement replaced that flawed concept.

It is time to show similar resolve today by pressing nations to repeal their blasphemy laws and challenging leaders to promote cultures of tolerance and mutual respect.

It is particularly important for free nations to repeal their own codes. Several European countries, from Austria to Greece, Ireland to Poland, still have blasphemy laws on the books. Repealing them would send the right message.

Finally, the world should press for the release of Raif Badawi and other blasphemy-law victims. While many Western governments condemned Badawi's flogging and urged that his case be reviewed, which reports suggest is now happening, none have called for his unconditional release.

Let the message be clear: Don't quash speech that belittles or offends. Fight such speech with more speech -- speech that ennobles. Honor freedom of expression and religion by repealing all blasphemy laws.

To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, please contact USCIRF at [email protected] or 202-786-0613.

Feb 2, 2015

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 2, 2015 | USCIRF

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Reports of pre-election violence, combined with rising societal and political tensions, increase the likelihood of religiously-motivated violence around Nigeria’s February 14 presidential elections, warns the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). 

“We welcome Secretary of State John Kerry’s timely trip to Nigeria in January.  His warning to presidential candidates Goodluck Jonathan and Mohammadu Buhari that the United States will withhold visas to persons who engage in, plan, and/or perpetrate electoral violence sends a strong message in support of peaceful elections,” said USCIRF Chair Dr. Katina Lantos Swett.  “Every effort needs to be undertaken to ensure peaceful elections and prevent the use of religion to stir up more violence.  The events leading up to and immediately following February 14 are crucial to Nigeria’s long-term stability and status as a multi-religious and multi-ethnic society.”

Concerns of electoral violence along Muslim-Christian lines are compounded by the horrific attacks perpetrated by Boko Haram.  This violent Islamist insurgency has now displaced one million people and controls large sections of the northeast of the country.  The terrorist organization’s escalating attacks and the Nigerian government’s inadequacy in responding to them create a difficult and volatile environment for the upcoming elections.  There are serious concerns that these factors will negatively impact the voting process and could lead to questions of electoral credibility, further putting Africa's most populous country at grave risk. 

USCIRF has warned for almost a year that the presidential elections again are becoming a flashpoint for religiously-motivated violence.  The April 2011 electoral violence in Nigeria’s north and Middle Belt states started as political, but quickly became religious in nature.  Three days of rioting left more than 800 dead (500 in Kaduna alone, with the vast majority being Muslims), 65,000 displaced, and 430 churches destroyed.  Earlier this month, USCIRF issued a Factsheet on Religion and Nigeria’s 2015 Presidential Elections, highlighting the potential for electoral and sectarian violence as the elections near.  With only weeks before the contest, reports are increasing of pre-election violence and threats directed at the candidates, parties, and their supporters.

“Unless Nigerian leaders take concrete steps to prevent electoral violence and calm their supporters, these elections could be more violent than those in 2011,” said USCIRF Chair Lantos Swett. “The potential for violence is increasing almost daily.”

USCIRF calls on Nigeria’s political parties to hold responsible their members who issue statements inciting violence along religious lines, and Nigeria’s police and judiciary to impartially hold accountable all perpetrators of electoral violence.

USCIRF has recommended the U.S. government designate Nigeria a “country of particular concern” since 2009.  The government of Nigeria continues to tolerate systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom affecting all Nigerians, both Christian and Muslim.  For many years, the government has failed to bring those responsible for sectarian violence to justice, prevent and contain acts of such violence, or prevent reprisal attacks.  As a result since 1999, more than 18,000 Nigerians have been killed in sectarian violence between Muslims and Christians.  Boko Haram, a militant group that espouses an extreme and violent interpretation of Islam, benefits from this culture of impunity and lawlessness as it exploits Muslim-Christian tensions and seeks to destabilize Nigeria.

To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, please contact USCIRF at [email protected] or 202-786-0613.

Jan 26, 2015

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 26, 2015 | USCIRF

WASHINGTON, D.C. – January 27 is International Holocaust Remembrance Day, a day the United Nations has designated to annually commemorate the victims of the Holocaust.  January 27 also is the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the notorious Nazi death camp. 

“We must remember the horror of the Holocaust and honor the memory of millions of Jews whom the Nazis and their sympathizers slaughtered.  However, remembering and honoring the victims, while vitally important, is not enough.  We also must take action, unequivocally condemning attacks against Jews whenever and wherever they occur.  We must make certain that governments hold accountable perpetrators of anti-Semitic acts, and rededicate ourselves to ensuring that such hatred, bigotry, racism, and prejudice is eliminated.  We have our work cut out for ourselves, as the murder of four Jews in the kosher supermarket as part of the recent terrorist attack in Paris sadly underscores,” said Katrina Lantos Swett, USCIRF Chair.

Despite the staggering losses and horrifying lessons of the Holocaust, anti-Semitism today has increased in many parts of the world and has taken on an alarming number of forms, including blood libel and conspiracy theories; Holocaust denial, glorification and relativism; nationalism that condemns the “other;” and criticism of Israel that crosses the line to anti-Semitism.  In too many countries, governments fuel anti-Semitism, incite anti-Semitic acts, or do nothing in the face of such acts, with such actions serving as a warning sign of malignant forces that threaten civil society and freedom.  

“Seven decades after the Holocaust, anti-Semitism is again on the move.  It is a global menace, a grave threat to Jews around the world, and a challenge to the basic humanitarian values of liberty, pluralism, and tolerance.  Civil society, along with governments, has an indispensable role to play in combatting anti-Semitism in all its forms, whenever and wherever it takes place.  Individually and as a nation, we must commit ourselves to closing the gap between the promise and practice of “never again,” said USCIRF Commissioner Hannah Rosenthal.   

To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, please contact USCIRF at [email protected] or 202-786-0613.