May 2005
1.
Over fifty
years ago, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights boldly proclaimed the
inherent dignity and the equal rights of all members of the human family.
Guided by the vision of equality for all, the Declaration enshrined the
fundamental right of every human being to freedom of thought, conscience and
religion. Despite the international community’s unanimous[1]
adoption of this Declaration and its codification in subsequent instruments of
international law,[2]
the world bears witness to persistent intolerance and discrimination based on
religion or belief, the proliferation of violence in the name of religion, the
manipulation of religion in the interest of political ideology, and increasing
tensions between religion and State policies.[3]
The rising tide of religious extremism has fuelled these developments,
threatening security, human development, and efforts towards peace. Widespread violations of this right – most
often targeting women and minorities – have continued. Given the
interdependence of human rights, such violations have compromised, among
others, the right to education, employment, peaceful assembly, citizenship,
political participation, health, and at times, life itself. Indeed, the promise
of freedom of religion or belief for all remains one of the most contested and
pressing human rights of our time.
2. The freedom to hold beliefs of one’s choosing and to change them is central to human development. It is the individual’s search for meaning and the desire to know who we are as human beings that distinguishes the human conscience. As such, we applaud the United Nations Development Programme for its 2004 Human Development Report titled, ‘Cultural Liberty in Today’s Diverse World,’ which, for the first time in the Report’s fifteen year history, acknowledged cultural liberty as a ‘vital part of human development’ and affirmed the ‘profound importance of religion to people’s identities.’[4] Indeed, the concept and analysis of human development throughout the Human Development Reports have evolved dramatically out of a materialist approach centered on wealth and income to embrace the concept of development as the expansion of human freedoms. By including cultural freedom in its analysis – including the freedom of religion or belief - the UNDP once again broadened the conceptual framework underpinning the evaluation of progress in human development.[5]
3. The UNDP’s focus could not be
more timely. Human development and security - two issues at the heart of
today’s global agenda - have refocused the attention of the international
community on the question of human freedom. In the United Nations Millennium
Declaration and the ensuing Millennium Development Goals, the nations of the
world identified freedom as a ‘fundamental value essential to international
relations in the twenty-first century.’[6]
Similarly, the widely noted 2002 Arab Human Development Report – a pioneer
effort by Arab scholars – identified freedom as both the ‘guarantor and the
goal’ of human development and human rights, singling it out as a primary
requisite for development in the region. In preparation for the comprehensive
review process at the upcoming High-Level meeting of the United Nations General
Assembly, the Secretary General, in two pivotal reports to the General
Assembly, stressed the critical relationship between development, security and
human freedom.[7]
Indeed, there can be no development without security, no security without
development, and both must be anchored in a firm commitment to the protection
of human rights and freedoms for all.
4. The UNDP Report has set the stage for an earnest re-examination of the role of freedom of thought, conscience and religion in human development – an examination anchored in the recognition of the dignity of the human conscience and guided by the standard of equality set by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. As a worldwide religious community, which regards the human conscience as sacred and believes in the independent search for truth, we urge the UNDP to give serious consideration to four critical issues intimately related to its Report: (1) the right to change one’s religion or beliefs; (2) the right to share one’s beliefs with others; (3) the responsibilities of the international community and national governments vis à vis marginalized and peacefully organized religious communities; and (4) the responsibilities of religious leaders vis a vis the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of religion or belief. We will address each issue in turn and conclude with recommendations for United Nations’ work in this arena.
The right to change one’s religion
or beliefs
5. The Human Development Report defines cultural liberty as the ‘capability of people to live and be what they choose, with adequate opportunity to consider other options.’[8] The Report, however, focuses primarily on cultural exclusion[9] based on ‘external’ manifestations of one’s religion or belief while omitting from its discussion the core dimension of cultural exclusion – namely a denial of the ‘internal’ right to change one’s religion or belief.[10] The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in Article 18, explicitly affirms that,
“Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion;
this
right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom,
either alone
or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his
religion or
belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”[11]
The right to change one’s religion or belief is accorded the status of a non-derogable right – a right that is protected unconditionally and is, at no time, subject to government regulation. [12] The special measure of protection accorded to this right reflects its place in safeguarding the dignity of the human being. Indeed, the individual’s search for truth and meaning is an activity most intimately linked with the human conscience and with the desire to see the world through one’s own eyes and to understand it through one’s own faculties of perception and intelligence. As such, it is inextricably linked with all facets of human development.
6. Due to pressure from dissenting States, however, subsequent United Nations treaties have used weaker language to define this right, failing to uphold the unambiguous standard set by the Declaration. [13] Even the General Assembly’s 1981 Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination based on Religion and Belief issued by the General Assembly
does not explicitly affirm the right to change one’s religion or belief. [14]. In what is perhaps the most comprehensive articulation of the right to date, the Human Rights Committee has identified the freedom to change religion or belief, freedom to manifest beliefs, non-coercion in matters of religion, and non-discrimination on the basis of religion as core components of this right as provided for in the Declaration.[15] Alongside United Nations jurisprudence, global conferences and gatherings[16] over the last 15 years have generated near universal commitments to promote and respect freedom of religion or belief. As signatories to the Universal Declaration and subsequent treaties and global commitments, governments bear the primary responsibility to create, safeguard, and promote the necessary conditions for the enjoyment of the freedom of conscience, religion or belief for all of their citizens.
The right to teach one’s religion
or beliefs
7.
Intimately
connected with the freedom to hold and to change one’s religion or belief is
the freedom to share those beliefs with others. Within the broad range of activities
potentially encompassed by the freedom to manifest one’s religion or beliefs-
the right to teach one’s religion or beliefs has been particularly contentious. [17] While the Declaration calls for the
unconditional protection of the ‘internal’ right to freedom of religion, the
‘external’ right to manifest one’s beliefs is subject to limitations:
Governments are permitted to place restrictions on this right for purposes of
‘meeting the just requirements of morality, public order and the general
welfare in a democratic society’.[18]
This latitude extended to States, however, has too often been abused in efforts
to quell minority populations and has raised questions about what constitutes
legitimate governmental interference in manifestations of religion or belief.
8.
States
argue that limiting the teaching of religions and the sharing of beliefs is
necessary to preserve particular traditions and to protect the rights of the
targeted populations, yet the right to freedom of religion or belief is
necessarily contingent on the exposure to new ideas and the ability to share
and receive information.[19]
Limitations on the basis of ‘maintaining public order’ and ‘morality’ have also
been applied with considerable latitude and in a matter inconsistent with the
principle of non-discrimination. [20]
Non-democratic and theocratic States in particular have repeatedly issued such
reservations without the burden of proof, calling into question not only their
interpretation of this right but also their protection of related rights and
freedoms such as the right to employment and education, and the freedom of
speech and peaceful assembly, to name but a few.[21]
While the ability to place restrictions on the freedom of religion or belief
can be meaningfully applied, States’ abuse of these restrictions only
exacerbates the marginalization of oppressed minorities.
9.
The protection of the freedom of religion or belief must also
entail vigilance in safeguarding citizens from the forces of extreme orthodoxy.
Incitement to violence, extremism, or hostility in the name of religion must be
forcefully sanctioned and unreservedly condemned.[22]
Similarly, States must consistently uphold the equality of women and men as a
moral principle and article of international law, condemning actions in the
name of religion, which deny human dignity and freedom of conscience to women.
Ultimately, a long-term preventive strategy must be rooted in efforts to
educate children and adults alike, equipping them with literacy skills and
opportunities to learn about other systems of belief. Within a culture of education, people who can
read the writings of their own religion as well as those of others, who are
free to question and discuss, and who are able to participate in the generation
and application of knowledge will be better prepared to counter the forces of
ignorance and fanaticism. [23]
Marginalized religious minorities
10. The challenge before States, and one of their central concerns as addressed in the Human Development Report, is the maintenance of social cohesion and national unity in the face of increasing cultural pluralism. The report cites the threats of social instability and violent protest as a primary imperative for States’ need to accommodate minority claims. Indeed, marginalized groups seeking redress can become violent, forcing States to address their claims in order to prevent social unrest and potential threats to national security. Yet this reactive mode breeds a dangerous pattern and itself gives a preference to violence, particularly where peacefully organized groups find their pleas repeatedly ignored. It increases the level of discrimination as groups find themselves excluded on the basis of religion and ignored as a result of non-violent modes of seeking redress.
11. The actions of States therefore must go beyond purely material and practical considerations and be guided by the force of moral principles and the rule of law. Foremost among these principles is that of unity – at the local, national, and global level – grounded in the peaceful accommodation of cultural diversity. States must discard outmoded notions of cultural homogeneity and ideological uniformity as a guarantor of peace and security and come to embrace a plurality of identities and beliefs, gathered together under the canopy of just laws and universal human rights, as the foundation for a cohesive and prosperous society.
12. The responsibility to uphold universal principles of freedom of religion or belief rests not only with States but with religious leaders as well. In a world harassed by violence and conflict in the name of religion, leaders of religious communities bear tremendous responsibility for guiding their followers towards a peaceful coexistence and mutual understanding with those who think and believe differently. Too often, those acting in the name of religion have fanned the flames of hatred and fanaticism, themselves serving as the greatest obstacles in the path of peace. Despite these painful truths, we bear witness to the fact that the religions and faiths of the world with which the majority of the earth’s inhabitants stand identified, have imparted a vast spiritual, moral, and civilizational legacy, which continues to succor and guide in these troubled times. Indeed, religions have reached to the roots of human motivation to lift our vision beyond purely material conceptions of reality to embrace higher notions of justice, reconciliation, love, and selflessness in the service of the common good.
13. Given the weight of culture and religion in shaping motivation and behavior, it is clear that legal
mechanisms alone will not engender the commitment and mutual understanding required to sustain a culture of peaceful co-existence. The role of religious leaders as partners – in word and deed - in the creation of a culture of respect for human dignity and freedom of conscience, religion, or belief cannot be understated. The forces of history now challenge every person of faith to identify spiritual principles within his or her own scriptures and traditions that answer the difficult questions posed by an age hungering for unity and justice in human affairs. In this common undertaking, based on an understanding of the inherent dignity, reason and conscience of every human being, religious leaders must uphold the sacred nature of the human conscience and unreservedly accord each individual the freedom to search for truth.
14. Urgent action is now needed to reaffirm the vision of equal rights for all without discrimination on the basis of religion or belief. As a first step, the United Nations must unequivocally affirm an individual’s right to change his or her religion or belief under international law.[24] Such a clarification would help to remove fallacious interpretations of this right and lend moral force to the condemnation of State policies and practices that violate the principle of non-discrimination in matters of religion or belief.
15. Following this clarification, concrete actions - investigative, legal, and operational - must follow. First, research and analysis are needed to clarify minimum standards for compliance with international law and to develop indicators, marking the presence or absence of freedom of religion or belief. An annual world report, prepared by the United Nations, assessing the state of this freedom throughout the world would provide further substance and facilitate comparisons over time and across geographic regions.[25]
16. In addition to clarifying the questions above, the United Nations needs to comprehensively and definitively address religious extremism as a major obstacle in the processes of peace.[26] While the United Nations has denounced religious intolerance and persecution, it has been hesitant to acknowledge and forcefully condemn religious extremism motivating violent and terrorist acts.[27] As women often bear the greatest burden of religious extremism and ensuing violations of human freedoms, the Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women should consider formulating a comment on issues specific to women’s freedom of religion or belief.[28]
17. We fully support the Secretary General’s call for Human Rights Council with a view to restoring the primacy of human rights as set forth in the Charter for of the United Nations.[29] Alongside the proposed reforms, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights should undertake steps to strengthen the role of the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion, increasing funding for her mandate to allow for the closer monitoring of trends worldwide and at a country level.[30] Given that the mandate of the Special Rapporteur represents one of the principal means of bringing issues of religious freedom to the attention of the United Nations, we recommend that more attention be given to the implementation of recommendations put forth by the Special Rapporteur. The High Commissioner may consider expanding the mandate of the Special Rapporteur beyond reporting strictly on violations to include reports of States’ efforts to implement her recommendations. In general, the Rapporteur’s reports would significantly benefit from a more substantial and interactive debate between the Rapporteur and States in question. For their part, beyond cooperating with United Nations human rights mechanisms, States should allow any visits requested by the Special Rapporteur and endeavor to meet her full investigative needs in the process.
18. By focusing on cultural liberty and religious
freedom as core components of human development, the 2004 Human Development
Report paved the way for a timely discussion, highlighting the interdependence
of freedom, development and security in today’s world. In an effort to push the
debate further, we have brought to the fore the standard of equality
articulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and its implications
for the construction of a culture respectful of the dignity and conscience of
every human being. We believe that the protection of the right to freedom of
conscience, religion or belief is not merely a legal exercise or a pragmatic
necessity; it is part of a much larger and essentially spiritual undertaking of
shaping attitudes and practices that allow human potential to emerge and
flourish. The human mind, endowed with reason and conscience, must be free to
search for truth and to believe.
[1] Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, U.N. Doc A/810 at 71 (1948).
[2] No fewer than 28 international human rights
instruments contain provisions specifically pertaining to freedom of religion
or belief.
[3] Civil
and Political Rights, Including Religious Intolerance: Report submitted by Mr.
Abdelfattah Amor, Special Rapporteur, in accordance with Commission on Human
Rights resolution 1998/18. U.N. Doc.
E/CN.4/1999/58 (1999).
[4] United Nations Development Programme. (2004). 2004
Human Development Report: Cultural
[5] The
report debunked myths about multicultural policies as a threat to national
unity and security. It presented best practices and emerging models of
culturally inclusive policies around the world focused on five policy areas:
political participation, religion, access to justice, language and access to
socio-economic opportunities.
[6] United
Nations Millennium Declaration, U.N. Doc A/RES/55/2
(2000).
[7] A more
secure world: our shared responsibility: Report of the High-level
Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change, U.N. Doc. A/59/565 (2004); In
larger freedom: towards development, security and human rights for all – Report
of the Secretary General, U.N. Doc. A/59/2005 (2005). In the latter, the
Secretary General stressed the enduring relevance of the United Nations’
Charter call to “promote social progress and better standards of life in larger
freedom,” and the interrelatedness of development, security and human rights.
The former report, calling for a more holistic vision of human security, framed
development as “the indispensable foundation for a new collective security.”
[8] 2004
Human Development Report, p.4, supra note 3.
[9] Ibid,
p. 6. The Report notes two forms of cultural exclusion: ‘living mode exclusion’
and ‘participation exclusion.’ Living mode exclusion, “denies recognition and
accommodation of a lifestyle that a group would choose to have”; participation
exclusion occurs when “people are discriminated again or suffer disadvantage in
social, political and economic opportunities because of their cultural
identity.”
[10] Ibid.,
pp. 56-57. While the Report notes that, “individuals must be free not only to
criticize the religion into which they were born, but to reject it for another
or to remain without one,” the issue of the ‘internal’ right of freedom of
religion or belief is referred to only in passing and without further
elaboration. As a core dimension of cultural liberty, this issue merits greater
consideration. As the Report itself acknowledged, “The
normative weight of freedom can hardly be invoked when no choice—real or
potential—is actually considered.” (p.17)
[11] Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Article 18, supra note 1.
[12] A
non-derogable right is not subject to governmental regulation, even in times of
a national emergency.
[13] The
freedom to change one’s religion or belief has not been expressed with such
clarity in any international instrument since the Declaration. For example: the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966) provides for
the individual’s freedom “to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his
choice”; the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
(1966) guarantees that the rights in the Covenant “will be exercised without
discrimination of any kind as to…religion…”; the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (1979) calls on
States Parties to take all appropriate measures to guarantee women “the
exercise and enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms on a basis of
equality with men”; the Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989)
affirms the “right of the child to freedom of thought, conscience and
religion”; the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide (1948) includes in its definition of genocide, “acts committed
with intent to destroy…a national, ethnical, racial or religious group”.
Notably, regional treaties such as the American Convention on Human Rights
(1969) and the European Convention on Human Rights (1950) explicitly
provide for the freedom to change one’s religion or belief.
[14] Declaration
on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on
Religion or Belief, U.N. Doc. A/36/684 (1981). The Declaration affirms the
“freedom to have a religion or whatever belief of his choice, and freedom,
either individually or in community with others and in public or private, to
manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and teaching.”
It is unfortunate that this Declaration has not yet attained the status of a
legally binding Covenant.
[15] Human
Rights Committee, General Comment 22, Article 18, U.N. Doc. HRI\GEN\1\Rev.1
at 35 (1994). The remaining core components of this right include:
the rights of parents, legal status, limits on government’s permissible
restrictions, and non-derogability.
[16] Global conferences, Declarations and Programmes of
Action that have affirmed the right to freedom of religion or belief include
the following: Declaration on the Elimination of all Forms of Intolerance
and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief (1981), Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action (1993), Copenhagen Declaration and
Programme of Action (1995); the United Nations Millennium Declaration
(2000); Millennium World Peace Summit – Commitment to Global Peace (2000);
Durban Declaration and Programme of Action (2001).
[17] General
Comment 22 (supra note 15) states that, “the practice and teaching
of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups
of their basic affairs, such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders,
priests and teachers, the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools
and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publications.” The
1981 Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and
Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief explicitly provides for the
right to teach one’s religion.
[18] Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Article 29, supra note 1. The International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights similarly provides for limitations
“as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety, order,
health, or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others” (Article
18).
[19] A change of identity resulting from
conversion does not constitute a violation of the individual’s human rights.
Rather it is one’s desire to maintain an identity that requires legal
protection. Similarly, States cannot use the rationale of preserving particular
traditions, religions, or ideologies to support limitations on freedom of
religion or belief.
[20] Limitations on the basis of
preserving ‘morality’ are the most controversial and lend themselves to abuse
as one religiously based moral principle can be used to override another’s
religious belief. The Human Rights Committee’s General Comment 22 asserts that,
“limitations on the protection of FRB must not be based on principles deriving
from one single tradition,” supra note 15.
[21] States
have also issued blanket reservations on entire Conventions based on the
State’s application of religious law. This is incompatible with Article 18 of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) which
provides for limitations that are proscribed by law and are “necessary to
protect public safety, order, health, or morals or the fundamental rights and
freedoms of others.” Furthermore, in its
General Comment on Article 18 of the ICCPR, the Committee on Human Rights notes
that any limitations on the freedom to manifest a religion or belief for the
purpose of protecting morals “must be based on principles not deriving
exclusively from a single tradition.”
[22] The International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights prohibits, “any advocacy or
national, racial, or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to
discrimination, hostility or violence.” Similarly, as called for in the United
Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Convention Against
Discrimination in Education (1960), States should condemn and
forcefully sanction those who, in the name of religion, use education and the
media to oppress freedom of conscience and to promote division, hatred,
terrorism, violence and bloodshed.
[23] The
former Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Mr. Abdelfattah
Amor, emphasized education – particularly concerning human rights - as a key
component of establishing a culture of tolerance and nondiscrimination. The Mr.
Amor convened the 2001 International Consultative Conference on School
Education in relation with Freedom of Religion and Belief, Tolerance and
Non-discrimination and called on participants to design an worldwide education
strategy for combating intolerance and discrimination based on religion or
belief. (U.N. Doc. E/CN.4/1999/58).
[24] To
definitively clarify the status of the right to change one’s religion or belief
under international law, the appropriate United Nations body could request the
International Court of Justice to give an advisory opinion on whether this
right has attained the status of customary international law or jus cogens.
Under Article 96 of the United Nations Charter, the General Assembly, Security
Council or other United Nations organ authorized by the General Assembly may
request advisory opinions of the Court ‘on legal questions arising within the
scope of their activities.’ Article 36 of the Statute of the International
Court of Justice provides for the jurisdiction of the Court in legal disputes
concerning, among others, questions of international law.
[25] Civil
and Political Rights, Including Religious Intolerance, supra note 3.
[26] Ibid.,
125 (a).
[27] The UN has been reticent to
identify religious fanaticism as a source of terrorism, referring to it
indirectly, as for example, "terrorism motivated by intolerance or
extremism" (S/RES/1373 (2001)). Even the various resolutions issued by the
Security Council, the General Assembly and the Commission on Human Rights in
response to the terrorist acts of 11 September 2001, failed to identify
religious fanaticism as the force fuelling these acts.
[28]
Tahzib-Lie,
[29] In
larger freedom, supra note 7.
[30] Only a
small fraction of member states have ever been monitored for compliance with
the articles of the 1981 Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief.