A/HRC/40/58
and ruled that the band had offended Orthodox believers. The judge also accepted the
conclusion of a psycholinguistic expert panel that determined that the performance by Pussy
Riot violated standards of public behaviour and offended Orthodox Christians. The
Khamovnicheskiy District Court found them guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious
hatred and hatred towards a particular social group. However, on 17 July 2018, the European
Court of Human Rights held that their criminal prosecution and imprisonment amounted to
disproportionate interference with the group’s freedom of expression. The Court’s judgment
explicitly took note of the Human Rights Committee’s general comment No. 34 (2011), along
with special procedure reports. As did Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and
ARTICLE 19 in their related submissions, the Court also referred to the Rabat Plan of
Action’s six-part threshold test.20
In Cuba, the Penal Code currently allows for the imprisonment from three months to
one year of persons believed to have abused the right to freedom of religion or belief, by
placing “religious beliefs in conflict with the aims of education, the duties of labour,
defending the nation in arms, the reverence of its symbols or any other stipulations
whatsoever contained in the Constitution”.21 This measure, which purports to defend public
order, allows the State to penalize a broad range of protected activities. As such, large-scale
detentions reportedly continued to increase in 2016 and 2017. In February 2016, 200
members of the Emanuel Church of the Apostolic Movement (one of the largest churches in
the Santiago de Cuba region) were detained, the church was destroyed, and church property
was confiscated.
43.
C.
Anti-apostasy laws
The existence of anti-apostasy laws and the violence that they engender may lead
individuals to exercise self-censorship which in our interconnected world may have a
negative impact of international reach. The range of victims include clerics, teachers,
students, writers, reporters, bloggers, painters, musicians, actors, publishers, booksellers,
webmasters, politicians, human rights defenders and dissidents, among others. Not only do
these laws undermine intellectual and artistic freedom essential for a vibrant society, but they
can also impair the communicative freedom essential for the exercise of rights related to
freedom of religion or belief. Moreover, they can also eliminate the space for due process
rights, which are essential for the rule of law and for the political discourse necessary for a
functioning democracy.
44.
Ashraf Fayadh
Palestinian poet and artist, Ashraf Fayadh, was sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia,
having been found guilty of apostasy in 2015, after which an appeals court commuted the
death sentence to eight years in prison and 800 lashes. Mr. Fayadh was first arrested on 6
August 2013, following a complaint by a Saudi Arabian citizen alleging that the poet was
promoting atheism and spreading blasphemous ideas among young people. He was released
the next day but was rearrested in January 2014 and charged with apostasy because he
allegedly questioned religion and promoted atheism through his poetry. In a press statement
on this case, former Special Rapporteur Heiner Bielefeldt stressed that people should be able
to express convictions, doubts and ideas without fear of persecution and that practice of
religious belief can best flourish in a society that allows for freedom of expression. 22 Mr.
Fayadh remains a prisoner of conscience.
45.
20
21
22
12
European Court of Human Rights, Mariya Alekhina and other v. Russia, Application No. 38004/12,
Judgment of 17 July 2018, paras. 105–110, 187, 190–191, 223–224, 229–230; and separate opinion of
María Elósegui, para. 14.
Cuba, Penal Code, (chap. VI, art. 206), titled “Abuse of liberty of worship”.
OHCHR, “UN rights experts urge Saudi Arabia to halt the execution of Palestinian poet Ashraf
Fayadh”, 3 December 2015.