E/CN.4/2001/0063
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Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities), is
interpreted in the widest sense in this report, whether in reference to minority groups within the
same religion or in relation to other religions, society, non-State entities and the State. More
attention should be paid to the situation of minorities in the light of the 1981 Declaration.
182. First of all, the issue is one of discriminatory or intolerant policies, legislation or State
practice, or even indifference on the part of State institutions which is prejudicial to minorities,
be they of the “major religions” or other religious and faith-based communities. Such minorities
are mainly affected by:
(a)
Threats to their very existence as a specific community (campaigns to eradicate
Christian minorities in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Jehovah’s Witnesses and Baptists
in Turkmenistan and members of Falun Gong in China; anti-Muslim policies in Myanmar; the
banning of the Faydal Djaria Muslim community in Chad; Egyptian jurisprudence and practice;
and the situation of Baha’is in the Islamic Republic of Iran);
(b)
Direct or indirect restrictions on displays of religion or belief (prohibition in fact
or in law of certain public displays of minority religion or belief in the Maldives, Saudi Arabia,
Bhutan, Myanmar and Nepal; refusal to register religious and faith-based communities, thereby
threatening all or some activities connected with religion and belief in Kazakhstan, Nauru,
Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan; non-recognition of conscientious objection, no provision for
alternative civilian service, and the punitive nature of this civilian service by reason of its
duration, which particularly affects the Jehovah’s Witnesses and other religious and faith-based
communities in Belarus, the Republic of Korea, Eritrea, the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia and Ukraine; the absence or inadequacy of instruction in minority religions in
educational establishments in Greece and Norway);
(c)
Manifestations of rejection such as fear of Islam, as in Papua New Guinea.
183. Minorities are also victims of the intolerance of non-State entities, especially religious
communities, political and religious extremist organizations and the media. Minority
communities are vulnerable in relation to other religions or beliefs (for example, the campaign of
harassment organized by Muslim leaders against Baptist missionaries and believers at Say in the
Niger; the excesses perpetrated by Muslim extremists against Christian communities in
Pakistan; the anti-Muslim remarks by a high-ranking Catholic ecclesiastic and the participation
of a priest in a demonstration against the construction of a mosque in Italy; and the situation in
Papua New Guinea), or within the same religion or belief (for example, violent attacks by
Orthodox Christians in Bulgaria on another organization belonging to a different rite; violence
perpetrated by small groups such as the “Almighty Cossack Army of the Don” and the Bassilists
against the Jehovah’s Witnesses in Georgia and the Russian Federation). The dividing line
between religious and faith-based communities and political-extremist organizations is vague
and sometimes non-existent. In any event, extremism such as that practised by the Taliban in
Afghanistan has more serious implications for minorities. Lastly, the Special Rapporteur wishes
to emphasize the particularly damaging role played by certain media outlets in helping to foment
fear of Islam and Christianity, which creates insecurity and intolerance of Muslim minorities
(as in South Africa and the United Kingdom) and Christian minorities (as in Turkey) in societies
throughout the world.