A/55/280/Add.2
remain very active in terms of educating or attempting
to provide guidance to Muslims, especially through the
mosques and madrasahs and the Islamic nongovernmental organizations providing assistance to the
most destitute members of society. There is clearly
intolerance — especially on the part of religious
officials, and sometimes even on the part of local
authorities. This is glaringly evident from the fatwas
and the restrictions imposed upon Muslim women in
their practising of religion (such as the ban on women
in mosques). These public-sector actors do, and can
exert a real and harmful influence over the Muslim
majority, which is easily manipulated. This is shown by
the absence of a popular reaction against the fatwas
and the social boycotting of the fatwa victims, as well
as the manipulation of the crowds in the attacks against
minorities. These actions threaten to undermine an
entire process of evolution achieved within society as a
whole — a process marked by progressive and
enlightened thinking. In particular, these actions
threaten to undermine the emancipation of
marginalized groups, such as women, promoted by the
Government, notably through various related
legislative initiatives and action programmes.
100. While recalling that, in general, State policy
respects freedom of religion or belief and their
manifestations, and is not opposed to religious and
ethnic communities or designed to oppress women, the
Special Rapporteur has formulated the following
recommendations with regard to the problems
described above.
101. First of all, the Special Rapporteur recommends
that religion be protected from all forms of political
exploitation, since such exploitation is detrimental to
both the political and religious spheres, and hence to
the State, society, and, more especially, to religious and
ethnic communities and to women.
102. The Special Rapporteur therefore recommends
that the State combat extremism, which is essentially
simplistic and obscurantist.
103. In this regard, it is important that any direct or
indirect involvement of extremists in attacks against
Ahmadis, minorities, ethnic communities, and women
be systematically pursued in the courts and combated,
notably through education.
104. It is also vitally important that the State take the
necessary measures to protect the mosques and
madrasahs from all efforts at indoctrination on the part
24
of extremists, so that places of prayer, contemplation
and religious education do not become instruments of
intolerance, discrimination, or hatred.
105. The Special Rapporteur also recommends that the
State implement a policy of prevention, and especially
to pursue its efforts in the area of education and to
broaden those efforts into a genuine culture of human
rights. This education policy must in particular address
religious officials, who must receive more rigorous
training. This means it must teach a perfect
understanding of Islam, its diversity, and its values of
tolerance, and train religious officials to respect other
religions and faiths, as well as in the principles of
human rights, non-discrimination, and tolerance,
especially with regard to women. This education policy
must also address the rest of society, and especially
Bangladesh’s future citizens (its pupils and students).
In this respect, it is recommended that the State revise
its primary-school textbooks and curricula, in order to
ensure that the religious and ethnic diversity of
Bangladesh are reflected in such a way that each
religion is presented in an objective manner, and in
order to promote the values of tolerance and nondiscrimination. This education policy should help
ensure that the values of tolerance and nondiscrimination become fixed in the people’s minds, and
remove socio-religious interdicts and taboos such as
those affecting women and the mixing of religions (for
example, marriages between people of different
religions, and conversions — especially conversions
from Islam to another faith). It is also important that
the Government pay particular attention to what is
actually being taught in the madrasahs, and to what is
being practised in the madrasahs on a day-to-day basis.
106. The Special Rapporteur recommends that the
State take appropriate measures to ensure that the
media are open to the religious and ethnic pluralism of
Bangladesh, and that it therefore educate the
population in the virtues of celebrating diversity.
107. The measures recommended above with respect
to suppression and prevention must make it possible to
confront the development of extremism and, notably, to
protect Bangladesh from the consequences of this
scourge, which is rampant around the world, including
in Asia. In particular, they must also make it possible
to combat political exploitation of religion by
extremists, and the tendency for this practice to be
taken up by other, non-extremist (and especially
secular) parties.