-Caveat Lector-

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/19990909/pl/us_religious_persecut
ion_2.html

Politics Headlines
Thursday September 9 5:25 PM ET
U.S. Studies Religious Persecution
By GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A State Department report Thursday pointed
to evidence of widespread religious persecution in Iraq, Iran and
Afghanistan, all under varying degrees of authoritarian rule, and to
discrimination in some democratic countries as well, including
Israel and India.
The report, covering 194 countries and territories, is the first of what
will become an annual assessment of the state of religious freedom
around the world. The most serious violators could eventually face
economic sanctions.
The study stressed that religious persecution is not confined to a
particular faith. ``Throughout the world, Buddhists, Christians,
Hindus, Jews, Muslims and other believers continue to suffer for
their faith,'' it said.
While the report did not rank the countries based on the degree to
which they limit freedom, the excesses attributed to the Iraqi
government stood out.
Iraqi leader ``Saddam Hussein has for decades conducted a brutal
campaign of murder, summary execution and protracted arbitrary
detention against the religious leaders and adherents of the Shiite
Muslim population,'' the report said.
It said Iraqi security forces ``have murdered senior Shiite clerics,
desecrated mosques and holy sites, arrested tens of thousands of
Shiites and forcibly prevented Shiites from practicing their religion.''
Shiites in Afghanistan also suffered persecution and killing at the
hands of the Taliban-led government in Kabul. Afghan police
impose ``severe physical punishment and imprisonment'' for
deviations from codes of worship and dress,'' the report said.
It said Iran is intent on eradicating the Baha'is through prolonged
detention and imprisonment, confiscation and desecration of
graveyards and holy places. It added that other religious minorities
in Iran also suffer.
In general, the report made clear that democratic countries are far
more tolerant of religious diversity than are countries run by
totalitarian or authoritarian regimes. The report credits India, for
example, for respecting constitutional provisions guaranteeing
freedom of religion.
But it said, tensions between Muslims and Hindus in India, and to
a lesser extent between Hindus and Christians, ``continue to pose
a challenge to the concepts of secularism, tolerance and diversity
on which the state was founded.'' It added that state and local
governments only partially respect religious freedom. The report
also said there have been numerous reports of human rights
abuses carried out by the mostly Hindu security forces against the
predominantly Muslim population in the region of Kashmir
controlled by India.
As for India's rival, Pakistan, the report said discriminatory
legislation has encouraged an atmosphere of ``religious
intolerance, which has led to acts of violence by extremists against
members of religious minorities, including Christians, Hindus,
Ahmadis and Zikris.''
In democratic Israel, the report said the country's 20 percent Arab
population does not receive the same quality of education, housing,
employment opportunities and social services as Jews. In addition,
it said, ``government spending and financial support are
proportionally far lower in predominantly non-Jewish areas.''
On China, the report said Chinese citizens can face harassment or
prolonged detention in labor camps if they practice religion outside
officially sponsored churches.
The study also cited credible reports of abuse against Buddhist
monks and nuns in China, including Tibet.
In Beijing, a Chinese spokesman rejected the allegations as
malicious interference.
``Nobody has been arrested or detained because of religious
beliefs,'' Foreign Ministry spokesman Sun Yuxi said. ``If religious
believers are arrested, it is not because of their religious beliefs but
because they have taken part in criminal activities.''
President Clinton is expected to meet this weekend with Chinese
President Jiang Zemin at the Asia-Pacific summit in Auckland,
New Zealand.

 Comment:  Now, don't you feel all better because Clinton is
looking out for your rights?



Kathleen


"The homicidal state shares one trait with the solitary killer--like all murderers, it 
trips on its own egoism and drops a trai
l of clues which, when properly collected, preserved, and analyzed are as damning as a 
signed confession left in the grave." -
Forensic Anthropologist Clyde Snow

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