Listen - Sponsor - Stations


Return Home
Future & Past Guests
Affiliate Syndication
About Bryant McGill
Meet Your Co-Hosts
Friends of McGill Live
Event Photographs
Program Archives
OUR COMMUNITY
Request an Interview
Sponsor Information
Apply to be a Guest
Guestbook & Comments
Contact Us
McGill's Online Works
Featured Treaty Signers
Vision Board
Int'l Photo Journal
Universality of Suffering
Books by Guests
Night Riders Magazine
Xammon Magazine
GUEST WEBSEARCH
Media Links
Top News Stories
World News Archives
Bryant's Official Site
The Goodwill Treaty
McGill Charities
Candle Vigils
Give Yourself
No Secrets, No Fear


Carmen Electra
Michael Jackson
Matt Damon
Montel Williams
Ray Romano
Evander Holyfield
Me & Cheech
Ray Lewis
Boomer



Light a Candle
Heal the World



Interesting World News



Discuss this Article | Post Another Article for Discussion

32 Nations Violating Religious Freedom

October 8, 2002
By Larry Witham, THE WASHINGTON TIMES

    The State Department yesterday identified 32 countries that violate religious freedom, ranging from anti-religious dictatorships such as China to regimes such as Saudi Arabia that are hostile to minority religions.

    Countries designated as "authoritarian" are nearly all communist and suppress all religion, and nations cited for "state hostility" to unapproved faiths are predominantly Muslim, according to the fourth annual Report on International Religious Freedom.

    The report, which details 195 nations, said that Egypt, India and Indonesia allow sectarian violence by dominant groups, while Israel and Russia discriminate against some religions, and anti-sect laws in France and Germany are being copied by communist regimes.

    "These inexcusable assaults on individual liberty and personal dignity cannot be justified in the name of any culture, in the name of any creed or in the name of any country," Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said at a news conference.

    "This report will serve as a basis for discussions with other nations on how best we can work together to end violations of this fundamental human right," he said.

    The annual report, required by Congress since 1998, does not prescribe potential U.S. actions, but Mr. Powell is required in its aftermath to issue a list of "countries of particular concern" that may have sanctions imposed.

    Nations listed for "particularly severe violations" now include North Korea, Iran, Iraq, Burma and Sudan.

    Since the report and sanctions were required by the International Religious Freedom Act, economic and political penalties already imposed on these countries have been called "double designated" responses to cover the religious violations.

    The independent U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, also established by the 1998 law, has criticized the State Department for not imposing new and tougher sanctions on countries such as Sudan and China.

    Amid the criticism, State Department officials have said the report establishes a basis for diplomacy with countries in hopes of solving individual cases or reversing trends of increased violation.

    "You often have to take satisfaction in small victories," Ambassador at Large for Religious Liberty John V. Hanford, who is responsible for the annual report, said at the news conference.

    Some countries that are allies of U.S. trade or the war on terrorism could be "on the cusp" of being added to the worst-case list, he said. "That is a tough call," he said when asked about Saudi Arabia.

    In addition to traditional forms of repression, he said, religious-based terrorism is "emerging as a new cause of religious persecution."

    The report said that "U.S. religious freedom policy is a means of fighting the war of terrorism" because such freedom promotes democracy abroad and relieves the duress that can produce young terrorists.
    The list of 32 countries, presented in the executive summary of the report, reflect a scale of the worst "level of brutality" to lesser forms of religious restrictions, Mr. Hanford said.

    Nations such as North Korea or Vietnam, where the state kills religious dissenters, are consider greater violators than Saudi Arabia, where "freedom of religion does not exist" but the violence is far less, according to the report.

    Of the worst nations, only Afghanistan has shown "a major improvement of religious freedom" with the fall of Taliban, the report said.

    "Religious freedom is under siege in many parts of the world," said Mr. Hanford, who has already traveled extensively to conduct quiet diplomacy since taking the post in May.

    While last year's report was overshadowed by the September 11 terrorist attacks, the listing of violator countries each year has provoked criticism from world capitals.

    "We're an equal opportunity offender," Mr. Hanford said. He cited the report's criticism of a French law banning sects, for example. "When I'm in Vietnam or China, this [French] law gets quoted" as justification for communist crackdowns, he said.

    The report explains that highest possible grade for a nation is to "generally respect" religious liberty, since it is not realized perfectly in any nation including the United States.

    The report is one of three annual human rights reports issued by the United States, the oldest being the "country reports" on all human rights. A second religious-liberty report is issued by the independent U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, which is often tougher on countries than the State Department.

Yesterday's report also notes that:
    •The Cuban government maintains "a strong degree of control over religion."
    •Laos has 19 "known religious prisoners" who are Christians.
    •Israeli laws favoring Orthodox Jews discriminate against other faiths.
    •Jews, Baha'is, and Sufi Muslims are imprisoned in Iran.
    •Blasphemy laws in Pakistan allow "rivals" to get revenge.
    •Muslim charities in Sudan withhold aid from non-Muslims.

Link to Article Source


Universal 7 Radio | gtbroadcasting.com | GlobalEnquirer.com | Comment


  News in Persecution
  1. Chinese Christian Leader Jailed
  2. Air Controllers Saudi Wanted Only Men
  3. The Dark Secret Kept Hidden for 50 Years How a Global Media Empire was Built on a Lie
  4. 32 Nations Violating Religious Freedom
  5. Seven Dead in Attack on Pakistan Christian Charity
  6. Target Recalls Clothing With 88 -
  7. Attack on Christian School in Pakistan
  8. Time to Take off the Blinders
  9. 145Death to the Jews146 Europe146s Anti-Semitic Intifada
  10. European Rights Commissioner Alarmed by Russia Anti-Semitism
  11. Anti-Semitism in the States
  12. Lebanon Court Sentences Anti-Syria Christians
  13. Farrakhan Backs Mugabe Land Seizure
  14. British Synagogue Desecrated
  15. Hate Flourishes on the Net
  16. White Supremacists On Trial in Boston
  17. Russian Anti-Jewish Sign Explodes
  18. Rise in Anti-Semitism Related To Terror Escalation
  19. Saudi Broadcasts Promote Anti-Semitism, Martyrdom
  20. US Anti-Semitism on Rise Since Sept 11
  21. Anti-Jew Posters Appear in Russia
  22. New Book Says Christians Suffered Most
  23. Burnhams A Year in Captivity
  24. Saudis Deport Men for Owning Bible
  25. Jewish Students Hit By Rise In Campus Hate Crimes
  26. Jews Called Accursed Forever and Ever
  27. Senate Passes Resolution Backing Israel
  28. North London Synagogue Desecrated With Swastikas
  29. Farrakhan British Ban Stays
  30. 14 Christians Killed in Indonesia
  31. Turning Babies Into Bombers
  32. Saudi Telethon Host Calls for Enslaving Jewish Women
  33. All They Are Teaching Gives Peace No Chance
  34. British Official Says Bible Could Violate EU Anti-Racism Law
  America General
  Asian Anxiety
  Cosmic
  Earth Changes
  Espionage
  Europe
  Financial
  Genetics
  Global
  Mars
  Mexico
  Mideast
  Nukes
  NWO
  Persecution
  Precious Metals
  Prophetic
  Signs
  Strange Stuff
  Technology
  Terrorism
  The Pale Horse
  Unrest
  Yellowstone

FAIR USE NOTICE. Many of the stories on this site contain copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making this material available in its efforts to advance the understanding of environmental issues and sustainability, human rights, economic and political democracy, and issues of social justice. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use such copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use'...you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml



Where applicable, U.S. & Int'l Copyrights by Bryant McGill. All Rights Reserved. Notices and Fair Use. McGill Trademark Licensed from the House of Gill, Corp Sole.