US hits out at Asian nations over religious freedoms


(AFP) – The United States warned the world was sliding backwards on religious freedoms Monday, slamming China for cracking down on Tibetan Buddhists and hitting out at Pakistan and Afghanistan.

As the State Department unveiled its first report on religious freedoms since the start of the Arab Spring, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (above) said it was a “signal to the worst offenders” that the world was watching.

“New technologies have given repressive governments additional tools for cracking down on religious expression,” Clinton told a US think-tank, adding that pressure was rising on some faith groups around the globe.

“More than a billion people live under governments that systematically suppress religious freedom,” she stressed.

“When it comes to this human right – this key feature of stable, secure, peaceful societies – the world is sliding backward.”

The 2011 International Religious Freedom Report noted that last year governments increasingly used blasphemy laws to “restrict religious liberty, constrain the rights of religious minorities and limit freedom of expression.”

Highlighting the situation in Indonesia and Afghanistan, the report recalled the case in Pakistan of Aasia Bibi, the first Christian woman to be sentenced to death for blasphemy in the country.

And while in Afghanistan the constitution says that followers of other religions are free to worship as they please it also maintains “that Islam is the ‘religion of the state,'” the report said.

The Afghan government’s “failure to protect minority religious groups and individuals limited religious freedom,” it insisted.

In China “there was a marked deterioration during 2011 in the government’s respect for and protection of religious freedom in China,” the report said.

This included “increased restrictions on religious practice, especially in Tibetan Buddhist monasteries and nunneries.”

“Official interference” in traditional Tibetan religious practices had “exacerbated grievances and contributed to at least 12 self-immolations by Tibetans in 2011.”

China and North Korea, where the report noted that religious freedom does not exist in any form, along with Myanmar are among eight nations designated as “countries of particular concern” for failing to accept religious rights.

They are accompanied by Eritrea, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan.

 



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