Human Rights and Religious Liberty
UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Article 18 "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."
Thursday, March 04, 2004

Advancing Human Rights in North Korea [Human Rights Watch]


Testimony by Tom Malinowski before the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations


Thank you Mr. Chairman for giving me the opportunity to testify today, and for ensuring that North Korea's appalling human rights record remains part of the picture as we consider the way forward with Pyongyang.  All of us here agree that North Korea is a country over which we should be losing sleep. I would argue that there are two reasons for that, not merely one -- certainly the nuclear program, which threatens our security, but also political repression so complete that it should seriously disturb our conscience.

Some day, when North Korea does open up, and we see with our own eyes the conditions we can now only glean from refugee accounts, we will be horrified. And I predict we will ask ourselves whether we should have said and done more today, just as people wonder whether they should have said and done more to defend the victims of persecution when Stalin ruled the Soviet Union or during the Cultural Revolution in China. North Korea is to our time what those experiments in negative utopia were to their time.  [more]


9:42:57 AM    comments []

UZBEKISTAN: Authorities close Christian church in Khorezm

By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service

On 27 February, Forum 18 News Service has learnt that the authorities in Khorezm region decided to close the Urgench Baptist Church. The only other church in the region is the Protestant Korean Church. It was decided to close the church as it had been working with children and would not revise its statute. Statute revision requires church re-registration, which the authorities have denied to other churches making them illegal. The authorities claim that children's work was taking place without parental consent, but parents had given their consent – only to have the NSS secret police pressure them into denying this. Those parents have now asked the church's forgiveness, Forum 18 has been told. Article 3 of Uzbekistan's law on religion forbids "the enticement of underage children into religious organisations, as well as the religious instruction of children against their or their parents' will". Unregistered religious communities are illegal and banned from operating, which provision is against international law. [read more...]


9:32:04 AM    comments []

Group slams use of girl soldiers. Young girls are being forced to fight in conflicts from Angola to Sri Lanka - and are often raped, a report says. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]
9:09:03 AM    comments []

Top Chinese dissident released. Wang Youcai, co-founder of an outlawed opposition party, is freed from jail early and is en route to the United States. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]
9:08:34 AM    comments []





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