Oct 26, 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 26, 2010
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Six Catholic residents from the rural village of Con Dau, Vietnam, are scheduled to go on trial Wednesday, October 27, for refusing to sell and vacate land-including a longstanding religious burial site-that has been in their village for 135 years to create a tourist resort.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) today urged Secretary Clinton to speak about the Con Dau case during an upcoming trip to Hanoi for the Near East Summit. USCIRF also urges the State Department to seek the villagers" unconditional release, as well as to press for the protection of their religious, legal, and property rights under Vietnamese law and international human rights covenants, to which Vietnam is a party.
"We recommend that Secretary Clinton raise with the Vietnamese, both publicly and privately, the case of Con Dau village and make a public statement condemning the continued violence and abuses faced by religious communities in Vietnam,” said Leonard Leo, USCIRF chair. "The Vietnamese government used intimidation and violence to force Con Dau residents to sell their property. The six detained should be unconditionally released and an investigation should examine allegations that police tortured detainees and caused the death of one Con Dau resident.”
USCIRF testified at the August 2010 Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission hearing on efforts by the Vietnamese government to obtain the property of Con Dau residents and about general religious freedom abuses in Vietnam. A copy of that testimony can be found at www.uscirf.gov .
USCIRF staff conducted interviewswith Con Dau residents, within the last month, and found credible evidence of intimidation, harassment, restrictions on peaceful religious ceremonies, and torture in detention. As many as 60 people were detained after Con Dau villagers participated in a May 4,2010, burial ceremony prohibited by the Vietnamese government. Those taken into custody describe beatings, sleep deprivation, and forced confessions. Eyewitnesses also claim that Mr. Nam Nguyen, the Con Dau resident who died after being in police custody, was healthy and working the day before he died. At his funeral, he had extensive bruises on his body, according to eyewitness accounts. The six who remain in custody have been held for over three months without public charge or legal representation, which is a violation of Vietnamese law.
"What has happened in Con Dau is unconscionable and is too steep a price for economic progress,” said Mr. Leo. "It is well-documented that religious communities in Vietnam-Buddhist, Protestant, Hao Hao, and Catholic-all face restrictions, intimidations, and even violence because of their religious activities or religious freedom activism. Vietnam is supposed to be our new best friend in Asia, but the United States cannot continue to pursue a relationship that advances Vietnam"s economic and security interests without seeing progress on human rights and the rule of law.”
USCIRF is an independent, bipartisan U.S. federal government commission. USCIRF Commissioners are appointed by the President and the leadership of both political parties in the Senate and the House of Representatives. USCIRF"s principal responsibilities are to review the facts and circumstances of violations of religious freedom internationally and to make policy recommendations to the President, the Secretary of State and Congress.
To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, contact Tom Carter, Communications Director at [email protected], or (202) 523-3257.
Oct 26, 2010
For Your Information
09/22/2012| ByLeonard A. Leo and Don Argue
The following op-ed appeared in AOL News on September 22, 2010.
(Sept. 22) -- President Barack Obama will be delivering an address on Thursday to the U.N. General Assembly and, as in previous years, it is almost certain that he will have to share the podium with a rogue's gallery of the world's most oppressive human rights and religious freedom abusers.
President Obama has the ability and the standing abroad to leverage this opportunity by speaking forcefully and eloquently on behalf of the cause for universal human rights.
Worst Violators of
Religious Freedom
Source: The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
He should make clear that the world's democracies, including the United States, stand unequivocally for those core rights, among which is freedom of thought, conscience, religion or belief.
Placing an accent on freedom of religion, here and now, is especially crucial, because we have been witnessing an accelerated erosion of this core human right in far too many countries around the world.
State-sponsored repression of people of faith on account of their religion has been acute these past several months in a number of countries.
For example, when Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad takes the podium at the General Assembly, we should try to imagine the horrific conditions that seven Baha'i leaders are suffering at Gohardasht Prison, after being sentenced this past summer on bogus charges of propaganda against the regime and espionage.
In a similar vein, the presence of Uzbekistan's President Islam Karimov at the General Assembly should remind us of the thousands of Muslims who have been imprisoned, denied due process and subjected to torture for peaceable exercise of their religious faith without posing any credible security threats.
And while Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah recently has undertaken limited reforms and promoted inter-religious dialogue internationally, we should not forget that his government continues to produce textbooks that teach children hatred and intolerance. And the kingdom's religious police, known as the Commission to Promote Virtue and Prevent Vice, regularly commits abuses and uses strong-arm tactics to enforce the state's version of Sunni Islam.
Buddhists, Catholics and Protestants in China, Burma and Vietnam; Copts in Egypt; Ahmadis in Pakistan; Orthodox Christians in Turkey and Eritrea; and other religious minorities from many other countries will be suffering under the yolk of oppression and discrimination as their leaders take the General Assembly podium in New York in an effort to gain favor and credibility.
And, of course, the fate of the people of Sudan should especially weigh heavily on the minds of all the U.N. delegates, as we move ever closer to the deadline of the North-South peace agreement, which, if not fully and fairly implemented, could very likely end in another bloody civil war where religion will almost certainly, yet again, become the proxy for killing millions of innocents.
This must be be remembered, and President Obama as well as other leaders should engage the world community on the need to find solutions for improving conditions for their freedom of religion and belief.
Freedom of religion is a fundamental human right that no government has the authority to deny, and that our government and other democracies around the world have the moral authority and duty to promote.
Hopefully, during this session of the General Assembly, all U.N. members will live up to this aspiration and so many others embodied in the U.N. Declaration of Human Rights.
Leonard A. Leo is chairman of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom , a federally mandated, independent bipartisan agency that advises the White House, the State Department and Congress. Leo is also executive vice president of the Federalist Society for Law & Public Policy Studies . Don Argue is vice chairman of the Commission on International Religious Freedom. He is also chancellor of Northwest University in Kirkland, Wash ., and previously served as president of the National Association of Evangelicals.
USCIRF is an independent, bipartisan U.S. federal government commission. USCIRF Commissioners are appointed by the President and the leadership of both political parties in the Senate and the House of Representatives. USCIRF"s principal responsibilities are to review the facts and circumstances of violations of religious freedom internationally and to make policy recommendations to the President, the Secretary of State and Congress.
To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, contact Tom Carter, Communications Director at [email protected] , or(202) 523-3257.
Oct 14, 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 14, 2010
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) applauds the awarding of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize to Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo and urges the Obama Administration to make religious freedom and related rights a more prominent part of U.S.-China relations.
In addition, USCIRF also calls on the international community to press Beijing for the unconditional release of Liu Xiaobo and other Chinese dissidents and human rights advocates.
"That Liu Xiaobo, and the drafters of Charter "08, have been harassed and jailed for courageously calling for the placement of human rights, democracy, and the rule of law at the core of China"s political system is a travesty that the international community must work to correct,” said Leonard Leo, USCIRF chair. "U.S. policy and programs should stand firmly with Liu Xiaobo and work to advance the reforms included in Charter "08, including the freedom of religion. But the main lesson the Obama Administration can learn from Liu Xiaobo is that human rights cannot be viewed as a sideline concern, but are critically linked to the advancement of all U.S. interests, including China"s peaceful rise.”
In a 2006 article "Changing the Regime to Change Society,” Liu Xiaobo cited St. Thomas Aquinas" notion of political virtue as critical to the reform of China"s political system, saying that "virtuous good governance lies not only in maintaining order, but even more in establishing human dignity … [recognizing that] humans exist not only physically, but also spiritually, possessing a moral sense … that is the natural source of our sense of justice.”
This idea worked its way into the Charter ‘08 document"s emphasis on human rights, including religious freedom, as essential reforms for China"s future. The Charter "08 document, originally signed by 303 Chinese intellectuals and activists, contains a list of 19 reforms, including guaranteeing, among other things, the freedom of religion, speech, assembly, and association and the right to private property. Regarding the freedom of religion, the Charter "08 document urges reforms similar to those advanced by USCIRF for the past 10 years in its Annual Reports and engagement with Chinese officials. The Charter "08 urges the Chinese government to:
"guarantee freedom of religion and freedom of belief, and implement separation of religion and state so that activities involving religion and faith are not subjected to government interference. Examine and repeal administrative statutes, administrative rules, and local statutes that restrict or deprive citizens of religious freedom; ban management of religious activities by administrative legislation. Abolish the system that requires that religious groups (and including places of worship) obtain prior approval of their legal status in order to register, and replace it with a system of record-keeping that requires no scrutiny.”
"Liu Xiaobo"s Nobel Prize demonstrates again the urgency of human rights reform in China and the need for U.S. leadership in pressing Beijing for change,” said Mr. Leo. "Beijing views Liu Xiaobo as an enemy of the state, but for millions in China and around the world, he represents the best of China"s future. The international community should continue to press for his unconditional release and embrace his calls for rights reforms as fundamental elements of better relations with China.”
USCIRF is an independent, bipartisan U.S. federal government commission. USCIRF Commissioners are appointed by the President and the leadership of both political parties in the Senate and the House of Representatives. USCIRF"s principal responsibilities are to review the facts and circumstances of violations of religious freedom internationally and to make policy recommendations to the President, the Secretary of State and Congress.
To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, contact Tom Carter, Communications Director at [email protected], or (202) 523-3257.