Saudi Arabia initiated inter-religious meeting at the United
Nations this week. King Abdullah called his initiative a "Culture of
Peace Summit," to promote tolerance among the world's major religions.
Participants who gathered in New York on Wednesday and Thursday called
for promoting mutual understanding and tolerance, through dialogue.
Among those who attended are leaders from Pakistan, Lebanon, Jordan,
Kuwait, Egypt, Britain, Spain and the Philippines, said Enrique Yeves,
spokesman for U.N. General Assembly president Miguel D'Escoto Brockmann.
President Bush joined the leaders this morning and gave a speech at the
U.N General Assembly hall.
Other participants include U.N.
Secretary General Ban Li-Moon and the head of the Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC), the bloc of Muslim nations spearheading a
campaign at the U.N. to outlaw the "defamation" of religion.
Critics
note that while King Abdullah hosted leaders from different Muslim
sects in Saudi Arabia, his other initiatives have taken place outside
the kingdom. Any inter-religious meeting inside Saudi Arabia could draw
opposition from conservative clerics unhappy with the presence of
Christian and, especially, Jewish religious leaders.
The
underlining results of this Summit are to make non-Muslims accept Islam
and the shari'a law as well as the Islamic banking system without any
recognition by Muslims to other faiths. The whole focus of the Summit is
to endorse a U.N. Resolution of anti-blasphemy law against Islam around
the world.
In 1999, Pakistan and the Organization of the Islamic
Conference introduced a measure to the U.N. Human Rights Council to
spread shari'a law to the Western world and to intimidate anyone who
criticizes Islam.
The measure was amended to include religions
other than Islam, and it has passed every year since. In 2005, Yemen
successfully brought a similar resolution before the General Assembly.
The 192-nation Assembly is set to vote on it again.
In 2007, a
non-binding Resolution 62/145 says: "It notes with deep concern the
intensification of the campaign of defamation of religions and the
ethnic and religious profiling of Muslim minorities in the aftermath of
11 September 2001." It also "stresses the need to effectively combat
defamation of all religions and incitement to religious hatred, against
Islam and Muslims in particular."
The resolution is really
designed to permit countries with a dominant religion, such as Islam, to
squelch any free-speech rights of religious minorities, according to
Bill Saunders of the Family Research Council (FRC). "So for instance, in
some Muslim countries, it's considered blasphemy to just say what a
Christian believes - because that is consistent with what Islam
teaches," Saunders explains. "Or, to try to switch from Islam to
Christianity, that's considered apostasy, and in those situations you
can be punished by death."
This also means that, it will be ILLEGAL to practice any other religion in an Islamic country other than Islam.
This also means that, it will be ILLEGAL to practice any other religion in an Islamic country other than Islam.
Critics
say that Saudi Arabia's policies are marked with oppression towards
non-Muslims, which is in direct conflict with their attempt to promote
religious tolerance abroad. By endorsing King Abdullah's call for
"religious tolerance" critics say, the U.N. General Assembly is
"partaking" in religious oppression in Saudi Arabia.
Muslims of
Egypt has been, for a long time, persecuting Christian Coptic minority,
under the auspices of the strict Islamic rule of Hosni Mubarak. The
Christian minority of Iraq are being persecuted by the Muslims, with
immunity and Christian churches are bombed with explosives in Pakistan.
There
is a widespread concern that the resolutions are being used to justify
harsh blasphemy laws in countries such as Pakistan, Egypt, Sudan and
Afghanistan.
In addition, every single constitution of the Middle
East countries (except Lebanon and Turkey) has a provision stating that
the laws of the land are based on the Islamic shari'a.
The U.S.
government mission in Geneva, told the U.N. Human Rights Council that
"defamation-related laws have been abused by governments and used to
restrict human right" around the world, and sometimes Westerners have
been caught in the web.
Felice Gaer, chairman of the U.S.
Commission for International Religion Freedom (USCIRF) was travelling
Monday and could not be reached for comments, wrote CNS News. But a
spokeswoman pointed to recent remarks Gaer gave to Fox News: "We'd like
to see a conference like this take place inside Saudi Arabia and the
fact that it isn't speaks volumes," she said. "That's true of the Madrid
conference [in July] and true of the one at the U.N."
Gaer voiced
the view that "the conference was part of a Muslim campaign to promote a
religious "defamation" resolution at the General Assembly," said CNS
News on November 11, 2008.
The European Union said the text
proposed by Islamic countries was "one-sided" because it primarily
focused on Islam. E.U. diplomats had said they wanted to stop the
growing worldwide trend of using religious anti-defamation laws to limit
free speech.
The European Center for Law and Justice filed a
brief with the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights in June 2008
warning that such anti-defamation resolutions "are in direct violation
of international law concerning the rights to freedom of religion and
expression.
"Saudi Arabia calling on international religious
tolerance is a little bit like the wolf calling for a sheep convention,"
responded Carl Moeller of Open Doors USA to Saudi Arabia's hosting a
forum to promote interfaith dialogue.
In fact the U.N. "blasphemy resolution" has emboldened Islamic authorities and threatened Westerners:
-
On Oct. 3 in Great Britain, three men were charged for plotting to kill
the publisher of the novel "The Jewel of Medina," which gives a
factional account of the Prophet Muhammad and his child bride.
FOXNews.com reported U.S. publisher Random House Inc., was going to
release the book but stopped it from hitting shelves after it claimed
that "credible and unrelated sources" said the book could incite
violence by a "small, radical segments."
- A British teacher was
sentenced to 15 days in jail in Sudan for offending Islam by allowing
students to name the class teddy bear Muhammad in November 2007.
- In February 2007 in Egypt an Internet blogger was sentenced to four years in prison fro writing a post that critiqued Islam.
- In 2004, Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh was murdered after the release of his documentary about the abuse of Muslim women.
-
On November 6, the Parliament of Kyrgystan adopted unanimously a new
religious law targeting Christians and other religious minorities. It
bans "proselytizing" and prohibits the conversion of Kyrgyz citizens to a
different faith.
The pressure to protect religions from
defamation has been growing ever since a Danish magazine published
caricatures of Muhammad, provoking riots across the Islamic world in
2006 in which dozens of people were killed.
Gabriel Sawma, a lawyer dealing with International Law, mainly
the European Union Law, the Middle East Law and Islamic Shari'a law.
Professor of Middle East Constitutional Law, Islamic Shari'a, Arabic and
Aramaic languages. Expert witness on Islamic marriage contracts,
including the mahr contract; expert witness on U.S.-Middle East
commercial contracts. Member of the Beirut Bar Association in Lebanon;
The New York State Bar Association; Associate member of the American Bar
Association. Author of "The Qur'an: Misinterpreted, Mistranslated, and
Misread. The Aramaic Language of the Qur'an." Author of an upcoming book
on "Islamic marriage Contracts in U.S. Courts.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1689868
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