E/CN.4/1995/91
page 146
The Special Rapporteur also expresses appreciation to the
non-governmental organizations for their valuable cooperation. Their
detailed information and the concerns they have expressed have been extremely
useful to him in fulfilling his mandate.
During the period covered by this report, the Special Rapporteur received
communications from virtually all regions of the world. Once again he notes
that manifestations of religious intolerance occur in countries at varying
stages of development and with different political and social systems and are
in no way confined to a single faith. The majority of the complaints received
concerned violations of the right to have the religion or belief of one’s
choice, the right to change one’s religion or belief, the right to manifest
and practise one’s religion in public and in private and the right not to be
subjected to discrimination on these grounds by any State, institution or
group of persons.
The Special Rapporteur wishes to draw attention to the fact that the
violation of the rights mentioned above also jeopardizes the enjoyment of
other human rights and fundamental freedoms enshrined in both the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, as well as in other
international human rights instruments. During the present reporting period,
violations of the provisions of the 1981 Declaration have had a negative
bearing on the right to life, the right to physical integrity and to liberty
and security of person, the right to freedom of expression, the right not to
be subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment and the right not to be arbitrarily arrested or detained.
The Special Rapporteur once again deplores the frequently serious
infringement of the rights of persons belonging to religious minorities in
countries with an official or clearly predominant majority religion. He also
notes the difficult situation of the members of certain religious
denominations in several countries and certain regions, even when they are not
strictly minorities, as is the case of the Shiites in Iraq and Saudi Arabia
and the members of the Christian communities in the Sudan, Egypt and Viet Nam,
as well as the Buddhists in Viet Nam and in the autonomous region of Tibet.
The Special Rapporteur notes the continuing extremism and religious
fanaticism in certain countries. Although such expressions of religious
discrimination and intolerance are often attributable to various economic,
social, political or cultural factors which derive from complex historical
processes, they are also the result of sectarianism and dogmatism. The
Special Rapporteur was disturbed in particular by cases where extremist
opinions had been expressed in public and implemented by Governments
themselves and cases where the authorities had not taken the necessary steps
in time to prevent the expression of such opinions, when they were in a
position to do so.
In certain cases, the Special Rapporteur had difficulty in establishing a
clear distinction between religious conflicts and ethnic conflicts, and
between religious intolerance and political persecution. However, he
transmitted the allegations to the Governments concerned and invited them to
furnish information on the cases reported.