A/HRC/13/40
B.
Discrimination and violence in the name of religion or belief
41.
Another worrying pattern is discrimination and violence in the name of religion or
belief. As emphasized in the preamble of the 1981 United Nations Declaration on the
Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief,
it is essential to promote understanding, tolerance and respect in matters relating to freedom
of religion and belief and to ensure that the use of religion or belief for ends inconsistent
with the Charter of the United Nations, other relevant instruments of the United Nations
and the purposes and principles of the 1981 Declaration is inadmissible.
42.
Discrimination and violence in the name of religion or belief is at the heart of many
conflicts which are — or are at least perceived to be — based on religious issues, often
intertwined with particular ethnic, national, political or historical backgrounds. Since the
creation of the mandate in 1986, various instances of discrimination and violence in the
name of religion or belief have come to light both in thematic reports and during country
visits or in the exchange of communications with States. The following examples from the
exercise of mandate are designed to illustrate some forms of militant extremism and
religious polarization, as well as the negative consequences that these phenomena may
ultimately have for the enjoyment of human rights, including freedom of religion or belief.
43.
In his annual report submitted to the Commission on Human Rights in 1993, the first
mandate holder, Angelo Vidal d’Almeida Ribeiro, noted “how difficult it is to curb or
eradicate the propagation of extremist and fanatical opinions and overcome the distrust
opposing members of certain denominations. Although the phenomena of religious
discrimination and intolerance are often caused by a variety of economic, social, political or
cultural factors deriving from complex historical processes, they are frequently the result of
sectarian or dogmatic intransigence. In view of their adverse effect on the stability of
international relations, the Special Rapporteur is of the opinion that States should be
vigilant in this regard and make determined efforts to combat religious discrimination and
intolerance at all levels”.29
44.
The second mandate holder, Abdelfattah Amor, emphasized that the nature of
religious extremism is such as to jeopardize the right of individuals and of peoples to peace
and to prejudice human rights as a whole.30 He noted that religious extremism acts as a
cancer in a religious group of any denomination and that it affects the members of that
religious group just as much as those of other religious groups.31 He added that extremism
in any religion, wherever it appears, openly or latently, covertly or overtly, and potentially
or explicitly violent, merits a hard look at the causes — including economic and social
causes — and at its immediate and longer-term effects.32 Additional aspects of extremism
include such phenomena as collective suicides by followers of certain groups, terrorist acts
by new religious movements and the impact of suicide attacks with an alleged religious
motivation.33
45.
Recent examples of discrimination and violence in the name of religion or belief can
be found in the Special Rapporteur’s two latest reports on communications.34 One of the
examples given in those reports, which are obviously not exhaustive, refers to riots and
attacks on places of worship perpetrated by members of a group who sought to impose their
29
30
31
32
33
34
14
E/CN.4/1993/62, para. 78.
E/CN.4/1995/91, p. 148.
E/CN.4/1996/95, para. 45.
E/CN.4/1997/91, para. 92.
See, for example, E/CN.4/1998/6, para. 151; A/52/477, para. 58; and E/CN.4/2003/66, paras. 93–104.
A/HRC/13/40/Add.1 and A/HRC/10/8/Add.1.
GE.09-17648