A/60/283
(iv) Application of the principle of secularism must be subject to particular
vigilance so as not to generate or legitimize new forms of discrimination and,
above all, not to constitute an obstacle to full participation in public life by
believers and practitioners of various religions;
(v)
Respect for and promotion of religious and spiritual pluralism.
8.
The Special Rapporteur recommended that the Commission invite the religious
and cultural communities that are victims of these phobias to not only promote indepth intercultural and interreligious dialogue, including through the establishment
of joint structures in each country in which they coexisted, but also to explore the
internal factors in their beliefs and practices which might have contributed to these
phobias.
9.
The Special Rapporteur also recommended that the Commission invite civil
society to further mobilize against all these phobias, without prioritization, and
above all to actively promote dialogue and interaction between the communities
concerned.
2.
(a)
Observations on the resolutions adopted
Avoidance of prioritization in efforts to combat religious defamation
10. In its resolution 2005/3 of 12 April 2005 entitled “Combating defamation of
religions”, the Commission, alarmed at the negative projection of Islam in the media
and at the introduction and enforcement of laws that specifically discriminate
against and target Muslims, noted with deep concern the intensification of the
campaign of defamation of religions in the aftermath of the tragic events of
11 September 2001. It expressed deep concern that Islam was frequently and
wrongly associated with human rights violations and terrorism. The Commission
therefore requested the Special Rapporteur to continue to examine the situation of
Muslims and Arab peoples in various parts of the world, the discrimination faced by
them with regard to access to justice, political participation, respect of cultures,
physical assaults and attacks against their places of worship, cultural centres,
businesses and properties in the aftermath of the events of 11 September 2001 and to
report on his findings to the Commission at its sixty-second session, and to make
recommendations to improve their situation.
11. The Special Rapporteur believes that, in the ideological context created by the
tragic events of 11 September 2001, Islamophobia is a particularly alarming
manifestation of discrimination. He wishes to draw the General Assembly’s
attention to the dynamic of the clash of cultures, civilizations and religions arising
from four aspects of Islamophobia: (a) the perception, in reaction to acts of violence
perpetrated by individuals claiming to be Muslims, of all Muslims and of the
Islamic community as a whole as a political problem; (b) official policies of
monitoring the teaching and practice of Islam; (c) the general increase in acts of
violence against Islamic places of worship and culture and Muslim worshippers; and
(d) the overt intellectual legitimization of Islamophobia by leading researchers and
writers and by some media outlets. In the Special Rapporteur’s view, any study of
this increase in Islamophobia should be based on both the historical, theological and
contextual singularity of this phobia and the universality of the underlying causes of
the defamation of religions.
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