E/CN.4/1995/91/Add.1 page 64 (b) Protection and promotion of the right to manifest one’s religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and teaching; of the right to peaceful assembly and association in connection with a religion or belief; of the right to teach a religion or belief in places suitable for those purposes; and of the right to observe days of rest and to celebrate holidays and ceremonies in accordance with the precepts of one’s religion or belief; (c) Prevention and elimination of discrimination on the grounds of religion or belief and, in particular, protection against discrimination in the areas of education, access to public posts, employment, the practice of a profession, and marriage; (d) Legal measures for dealing with offences related to religious beliefs or feelings and protection of the places, ceremonies and traditions linked to religion or belief; (e) Conscientious objection to military service; (f) Education, including in particular the religious education of children and adults, and provisions and practices in that field; and (g) Legal restrictions on the above-mentioned rights. ARGENTINA 27. On 2 June 1994, the Permanent Mission of the Argentine Republic to the United Nations Office at Geneva transmitted the following general information to the Special Rapporteur: "The Argentine Government has submitted to Congress a draft law on religious freedom which sets forth the contents of that right in the light of consistent national case-law, commitments under the human rights instruments in force in the country and international law as expressed in the Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief. Without ruling out the possibility of communicating the text at a later date, we will refer here to the major principles of the draft law, which is currently before the Committee on Foreign Affairs and Worship of the House of Deputies and which has already been passed by the Senate. The draft law consists of 22 articles divided into six chapters on the following subjects: (i) basic principles; (ii) relations with the Apostolic Roman Catholic Church; (iii) the Register of Churches and Denominations; (iv) the Consultative Council for Religious Questions; (v) protection of religious freedom; and (vi) transitional provisions. In its current form, the draft law derogates both from the law currently in force on the subject, Act No. 21745, approved and promulgated on 10 February 1978, and from regulatory Decree No. 2037/79.

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