E/CN.4/1987/35
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Similarly, in the recent past several wars which resulted in heavy loss of
life were fought partly on religious grounds. This is equally true of civil
wars in which the members of several sects and religious denominations
confront each other. Even in certain countries where there is no prevailing
climate of civil war, confrontations between religious communities may lead to
violence and cause the death of many persons.
78. Situations also occur where members of a religious minority are the
victims of persecution that is more or less tolerated by the authorities. In
several countries, cases have been reported of murders committed either
collectively or by individuals against members of religious minorities, with
no proper legal proceedings being instituted against the principals.
79. Sometimes the authorities are more directly implicated in the
infringement of the right to life. In several countries, religious
authorities have been assassinated by members of the armed forces or the
police. There have also been cases of clergymen dying in labour camps or
prison, as a result of ill-treatment during their detention, unexplained
deaths of religious leaders have also occurred in several countries. Finally,
death sentences may be pronounced and executed for religious reasons. In some
countries, there have been dozens, sometimes even hundreds of executions,
including those of minors for religious reasons. The main charge is sometimes
related to a religious matter, such as apostasy. In other cases, religious
grounds are not expressly invoked, and political reasons or charges of
espionage or sabotage are adduced. However, there is every reason to believe
that religious considerations are the cause of these executions.
80. The right to physical integrity is also infringed for reasons of
religion. As in the case of violations of the right to life, these
infringements may be brought about by individuals animated by religious
hatred, may enjoy the complicity of the Government, or may even be carried out
by the authorities themselves. They may take the form of physical brutality
such as torture, beatings, rape or psychological pressure such as threats
against close relatives or various forms of harassment such as police
surveillance, interrogations, and solitary confinement. In some cases
believers identified at the place of worship are persecuted; in other cases,
clergymen are the main victims of ill-treatment. Often, the police are
responsible for persecution and ill-treatment at the time of arrest, or during
detention.
81. Breaches of freedom of thought, conscience and religion often lead to the
infringment of the right to liberty and security of person. Thousands of
cases of arbitrary arrest and detention for reasons of religion have occurred
throughout the world and may be observed in a number of countries. In several
countries, there may at times be several hundred prisoners of conscience.
Infringements of the right to liberty may take various forms, such as house
arrest, internal exile, detention in a psychiatric hospital, imprisonment,
sometimes for very long periods, and assignment to a re-education or labour
camp. The legal justifications adduced by the authorities may also vary. In
some cases, the law is invoked in cases of arrest of members of religious
sects and various provisions concerning religious activities are applied, such
as the illegality of certain sects or of certain religious demonstrations and
practices; at other times, religious grounds are not explicitly cited among
the charges brought, but religious demonstrations are interpreted in such a