New report warns of ‘escalation’ in global persecution against non-believers
Posted: Thu, 10 Dec 2015 07:59
The
International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) has warned that
worldwide "persecution of the non-religious has escalated" in the past
year.
The 2015 "Freedom of Thought" report is the
fourth annual study produced by IHEU that "records discrimination and
persecution against humanists, atheists, and the non-religious, with a
country-by-country assessment".
It found that "there
has been a rise in extrajudicial violence" across the globe targeting
secularists, atheists, humanists and critics of religion, and that in
several states "harsher judicial sentences have been handed down for
crimes such as 'blasphemy' and 'apostasy'."
The 2015
report highlights the "string of murders in Bangladesh" targeting
secularists and non-believers, who were "hacked to death in machete
assassinations. The victims were Avijit Roy, Washqiur Rahman Babu,
Ananta Bijoy Das, Niladri Chatterjee, and most recently the publisher
Faisal Arefin Dipon."
While these targeted murders
have been "relatively well-reported", along with the case of Saudi
secularist Raif Badawi, the Freedom of Thought report also highlights
"less well-known cases, such as Egyptian student Sherif Gaber. In
February this year, Gaber was sentenced to a year's hard labour for
'contempt of religion' (he had declared his atheism on Facebook) and for
promoting 'debauchery' (he had challenged a lecturer who said that
homosexuals should be 'killed in the streets'). Gaber went into hiding
following the sentence this year."
Among many other
examples, the report cites the case of another Egyptian student, Karim
al-Banna, who was "arrested at an atheist cafe last November, and was
this year handed a three-year jail term for 'insulting religion'."
IHEU
have drawn attention to other under-reported stories, including the
assassinations of three Indian rationalists in recent years, including
two murders in 2015, and a spate of death sentences handed-out for
apostasy in Saudi Arabia and Mauritania.
In one case
in the Maldives, the report says that "the administrators of atheist
Facebook pages were publicly identified, kidnapped by a 40-strong gang,
compelled to 'recant' their atheism and hand over passwords to their
accounts. Anti-atheist Facebook pages have forced many secular
Maldivians offline throughout 2015."
The report notes
positive developments in Iceland and Norway, both of which abolished
blasphemy legislation in the course of 2015, but it paints a bleak
picture of the global situation. IHEU say there is a "real and growing
threat to non-religious people throughout the world, with people being
imprisoned and murdered for expressing secular beliefs."
Bob
Churchill, who edited the report and is IHEU's director of
communications, said: "The world must recognise that to identify and
speak out as non-religious is a basic human right, and the fact there
are increasing numbers of people demanding recognition of this right is
not a signal of moral decay but of a functioning, free society."
The
National Secular Society is an affiliate of IHEU, which has recognised
status at the United Nations as the umbrella organisation for
non-religious, humanist and secularist groups. NSS campaigns manager,
Stephen Evans, commented: "The world is seeing continuing struggle
between secular democratic values and authoritarianism and theocracy.
People of all faiths and none fall victim to those seeking to close down
dissent, discussion and debate. This report is vital in setting out the
full extent of discrimination and persecution faced by secularists and
the non-religious; a topic that has, until now, been sadly neglected."
The Freedom of Thought Report 2015 can be downloaded here.
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