international association for
religious freedom
belief with integrity
Agenda Item 3: Protection of the existence and prevention of violence against
religious minorities
Oral Statement by the International Association for Religious Freedom (IARF) 6th
Session Forum on Minority Issues, 26th November 2013
Thank you Madam President.
My name is Arben Sulejmani. I am the official representative of the Bektashi Community,
a religious minority in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and a member of the
International Association for Religious Freedom (IARF), an international organization of
over 70 member associations of religious and faith based organizations working for
freedom of religion or beliefs in over 30 countries.
My intervention on this agenda item focuses on acts of aggression or violence against the
Bektashi community, including intimidation, specifically in our places of worship and
assembly. We are urging the government to protect and guarantee our right to property like
any of the religious groups in our country so that we can freely practice our religion and
culture in community with other members of our community.
Non-Recognition
In Macedonia, there is no official state religion; however, a 2001. constitutional amendment
specifically lists five religious groups: the MOC-OA, the Islamic Community of Macedonia
(ICM), the Roman Catholic Church, the Jewish community, and the Evangelical Methodist
Church.
The 2007 Law on the Legal Status of a Church, a Religious Community and a Religious
Group allows for the legal registration of other religious groups, however, despite our
applications for registration, our group has been denied legal recognition due to the the prior
use of the Bektashi title by a separate group, and based on the Supreme Court's decision
that the teachings of the Bektashi have similarities to the Islamic Community of Macedonia
(ICM).
No less than the former Special Rapporteur of Freedom of Religion and Belief, Asma
Jahangir, on her Mission to the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in 2009
recognized the resulting tensions and friction between different Muslim groups in the
country.