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41. In some cases, the precepts peculiar to a given religion or sect are the
source of conflict between the religious duties of the followers and their
civic obligations. Thus, in several countries, the members of one sect are
persecuted because of their refusal, based on religious belief, to salute the
national flag or to sing the national anthem.
42. Economic factors can also lend to or aggravate a lack of understanding or
religious intolerance. Thus, the tense intercommunity relations prevailing at
present in several countries, which sometimes cause serious disturbances, are
frequently due not only to purely religious schisms and dissensions but also
to economic causes. Sometimes the members of a religious minority occupy a
previleged economic position in society, incurring resentment on the part of
the majority. Such resentment is then reflected in strong hostility towards
the followers of the minority religion and, therefore, towards the religion
itself.
43. Sometimes, economic and cultural factors come together to create a lack
of understanding of particular religious values. Thus, in several countries
where there are still indigenous populations that have preserved their
ancestral religious traditions, considerations of an economic nature have
sometimes prevailed over respect for those traditions. For example, there is
the example of the appropriation by the State, with the stated aim of assuring
the economic development of certain "backward" areas, of land regarded as
sacred for the religious requirements of certain tribes. Further, there is
the establishment of tourist sites, dams or other utilitarian structures
regarded by indigenous populations as profaning the inviolable character of
places which they regard as sanctuaries. Similarly, the requirements of some
ceremonies, such as a special use of flora and fauna in some religions where
nature as a whole is regarded as sacred, frequently meets with cultural
incomprehension and rejection by the authorities.
4.
Intolerance towards other religions and beliefs
44. While the attitude of Governments and various legal, political, economic
and cultural factors can, to a large extent, hamper the implementation of the
Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of
Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief, it would however seem that the
sectarian and intransigent attitude of the followers of a particular religion
or belief is sometimes the root cause of situations and incidents incompatible
with the provisions of the Declaration. A large number of incidents which
have come to the attention of the Special Rapporteur, either through the media
or in documents transmitted to him, involve clashes, sometimes violent,
between members of various religious communities. For example, in a number of
multiconfessional countries, the various religions do not always co-exist
without incidents. For example, one country is afflicted by recurrent and
serious riots stemming from incidents involving the followers of various
faiths, such as throwing stones at religious processions, attacks against holy
places or persons belonging to a rival community. Interconfessional violence
in this country generally results in the loss of many lives. In another
multiconfessional country, where civil war has been raging for over 10 years,
reciprocal lack of understanding and religious hatred are added to other
grounds for tension, thereby perpetuating a situation of conflict and
unceasing violence. Other examples attest to the persistence, in the modern
era, of age-old religious hatred.