Baha'i News: "Baha'i Question" cited at European Parliament human rights hearing

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Date Tue, 31 May 2011 16:33:29 +0300

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"Baha'i Question" cited at European Parliament human rights hearing


BRUSSELS, Belgium, 31 May 2011 (BWNS) – Victims of religious intolerance are 
not just people deprived of the right to practice their faith – they suffer 
abuses in every aspect of their daily lives.

This observation was made at a hearing held before the European Parliament's 
Subcommittee on Human Rights.

Penelope Faulkner – a member of the European Platform on Religious 
Discrimination and Intolerance (EPRID) – highlighted the degree to which 
freedom of religion or belief is threatened around the world. 

It is a "massive problem," said Ms. Faulkner. "Especially in countries where 
the state...incites hatred, religious minorities are defenceless. 

"They lose their rights, their livelihood and, in many cases, their lives."

"This is the case of the Baha'i in Iran where the authorities implement a 
systematic plan to deal with what they call the 'Baha'i Question' – with 
specific directives to block access to education, confiscate property, deny 
employment and deny citizenship rights to anyone known to be Baha'i," said Ms. 
Faulkner. 

Her comments came just days after some 16 individuals were arrested in Iran for 
trying to operate an informal university to provide education to Baha'is who 
have been barred from higher education by the government. 

Ms. Faulkner also noted that recent research has found that 70% of the world's 
population is living in places where religious freedom is restricted or abused. 

"It is in every continent, every community, including Europe. The devastating 
toll of the human suffering in recent months shows that EU policies in this 
area are not only needed but much overdue," she said. 


"Human beings are responsible"

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, Heiner 
Bielefeldt, told the hearing that he sees such violations on a daily basis. 

"And what shocks me most is the degree of hatred against religious minorities 
between communities – hatred often nourished by a paradoxical combination of 
fear sometimes bordering paranoia and contempt," said Professor Bielefeldt.

But such hatreds can be overcome, he said. 

"After all, it is human beings who are responsible, human beings who also can 
change, groups of human beings who can also evolve in their conviction. This is 
something we must always take into account."

Professor Bielefeldt told the hearing – held on 26 May – that freedom of 
religion or belief is a universal human right, which must be also interpreted 
to encompass the broadest interpretation of religion.

"You see lots of countries in various regions of the world that promise freedom 
of religion or belief in their constitution then say, 'O.K. There are three 
options – you can be Jewish, Christian, Muslim. Period.'

"Sometimes it's five options. Sometimes it's six options. Sometimes it's no 
religions. But the starting point – if you really stick to the universalistic 
nature of human rights – must be the dignity of human beings and their 
self-understanding. 

"If you know human beings, their self-understanding is very, very, very 
diverse," he said.

But, Professor Bielefeldt noted, the United Nations treaties concerning the 
issue clearly state that freedom of religion or belief  "protects theistic, 
non-theistic, atheistic beliefs, as well as the right not to profess any 
religion or belief...This is the universalistic spirit, and not only spirit but 
also letter of human rights and freedom of religion. And this is really under 
threat."


A broader context

Also on the panel was the Baha'i International Community's representative to 
the European Union, Sarah Vader. She suggested that freedom of religion or 
belief should be considered in a "broader context of democracy and human rights 
protection."

"The EU should pay particular attention to being inclusive and fair, enabling 
the participation of all – including those more vulnerable groups such as 
women, youth, ethnic and religious minorities," said Ms. Vader, who was also 
speaking on behalf of EPRID, a coalition of non-governmental organizations in 
support of freedom of religion or belief of which the Baha'i International 
Community is a member.

"In relation to the EU's future policy on freedom of religion or belief, it is 
necessary for the process to be open, transparent and inclusive, and find a way 
of involving civil society at different levels, whether it be here in Brussels 
or at the level of capitals and delegations at the EU," she said.

Ms. Vader offered a series of recommendations by which the EU could improve its 
overall monitoring and approach to freedom of religion or belief, such as by 
establishing a special envoy for religious freedom and preparing an annual 
report on the progress worldwide made towards freedom of religion or belief.





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http://news.bahai.org/story/830

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