Muslim nations launch holy war against free speech
flockwoodBy FRANK JORDANS
Associated Press Writer
GENEVA (AP) — Four years after cartoons of the prophet Muhammad set off violent protests across the Muslim world, Islamic nations are mounting a campaign for an international treaty to protect religious symbols and beliefs from mockery — essentially a ban on blasphemy that would put them on a collision course with free speech laws in the West.
Documents obtained by The Associated Press show that Algeria and Pakistan have taken the lead in lobbying to eventually bring the proposal to a vote in the U.N. General Assembly.
If ratified in countries that enshrine freedom of expression as a fundamental right, such a treaty would require them to limit free speech if it risks seriously offending religious believers. The process, though, will take years and no showdown is imminent.
The proposal faces stiff resistance from Western countries, including the United States, which in the past has brushed aside other U.N. treaties, such as one on the protection of migrant workers.
Experts say the bid stands some chance of eventual success if Muslim countries persist. And whatever the outcome, the campaign risks reigniting tensions between Muslims and the West that President Barack Obama has pledged to heal, reviving fears of a “clash of civilizations.”
Four years ago, a Danish newspaper published cartoons lampooning the prophet Muhammad, prompting angry mobs to attack Western embassies in Muslim countries, including Lebanon, Iran and Indonesia. In a countermovement, several European newspapers reprinted the images.
The countries that form the 56-member Organization of the Islamic Conference are now lobbying a little-known Geneva-based U.N. committee to agree that a treaty protecting religions is necessary.
The move would be a first step toward drafting an international protocol that would eventually be put before the General Assembly — a process that could take a decade or more.
The proposal may have some support in the General Assembly. For several years the Islamic Conference has successfully passed a nonbinding resolution at the General Assembly condemning “defamation of religions.”
If the treaty was approved, any of the U.N.’s 192 member states that ratified it would be bound by its provisions. Other countries could face criticism for refusing to join.
The United States has declared it won’t accept international treaties that restrict the First Amendment right to free speech.
But there are signs the U.S. is worried by the Islamic Conference campaign. Behind the scenes it has been lobbying hard to quash the proposal, dispatching a senior U.S. diplomat to Geneva last month for talks described as akin to trench warfare.
“The U.S. presence can be significant in determining the whole destiny of the process,” said Lukas Machon, who represents the International Commission of Jurists at the U.N.
From a legal point of view, “the whole exercise is dangerous from A-Z because it’s a departure from the practice and concept of human rights,” Machon said. “It adds only restrictions.”
In a letter obtained by the AP, Pakistan said insults against religion were on the increase.
The Islamic Conference “believes that the attack on sacredly held beliefs and the defamation of religions, religious symbols, personalities and dogmas impinge on the enjoyment of human rights of followers of those religions,” the letter said. It was sent last month to members of the Ad Hoc Committee on Complementary Standards, a temporary committee created to consider a previous anti-racism treaty.
In a separate submission to the committee, Pakistan proposed extending the treaty against racism to require signatories to “prohibit by law the uttering of matters that are grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion.”
It’s not clear who would decide what is considered grossly abusive, but each country’s criminal courts would likely have initial jurisdiction over that decision, according to Marghoob Saleem Butt, a Pakistani diplomat in Geneva who confirmed the campaign’s existence and has lobbied for the ban.
“There has to be a balance between freedom of expression and respect for others,” Butt said in a telephone interview.
“Taking the symbol of a whole religion and portraying him as a terrorist,” said Butt, referring to the Muhammad cartoons, “that is where we draw the line.”
One American expert with more than 20 years experience of the U.N. human rights system said the treaty could have far-reaching implications.
“It would, in essence, advance a global blasphemy law,” said Felice Gaer, a member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. The independent, congressionally mandated panel issued a report last week warning that existing laws against blasphemy, including in Pakistan, “often have resulted in gross human rights violations.”
In Egypt, blasphemy laws have been used to suppress dissidents, said Moataz el-Fegiery, executive director of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies. Abdel Kareem Nabil, a blogger, was sentenced in February 2007 to four years in prison for insulting Islam and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
He said reformists who reinterpret traditional Islamic texts have also become the target of blasphemy accusations.
More broadly, introducing laws to protect religions from criticism would weaken the whole notion of human rights, said Sweden’s ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva, Hans Dahlgren.
“Religions as such do not have rights — it’s people who have rights,” he said, adding that the European Union, whose presidency Sweden currently holds, would oppose attempts to limit freedom of speech.
The treaty goes against the grain of recent efforts by Western and Muslim countries to find common ground on human rights.
Only last month a joint U.S.-Egyptian resolution on freedom of expression won unanimous support in the U.N. Human Rights Council, much to the surprise of seasoned observers. “We will engage, and we’re going to keep engaging,” said Michael Parmly, spokesman for the U.S. Mission in Geneva.
In a telephone interview Wednesday, the Ad Hoc Committee’s chairman, Algerian Ambassador Idriss Jazairy, said concerns the treaty could stifle free speech have been “whipped up into a bugaboo.”
Failure to agree on a treaty would boost extremists in the Arab world, said Jazairy, a former envoy to Washington now considered a key player in the U.N.’s human rights forum.
“If we keep hitting this glass wall and say there’s nothing you can do about Islamophobia — you can do something about anti-Semitism but Islamophobia is out of bounds — you give an ideal platform for recruitment of suicide bombers,” he said.
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On the Net:
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom: http://www.uscirf.gov
November 19th, 2009 at 4:42 pm
Yeah, I’ll guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree on this one.
November 19th, 2009 at 6:17 pm
No, Cheese, I won’t agree to disagree. I stand on my God given right to live as a freeman, to create, own, use & exchange property, to hold & express opinions and to believe & worship as I see fit or not.
I blessed well will not yield to the OIC, Ummah al-Islamiyya, the UN or any other entity.
So we violate Muslim’s rights by offering proof of the fact that Moe was a terrorist? Fine, by God! Read Sahih Bukhari 4.52.220 and see for yourself. “…made victorious by terror…”.
No! I go further! Islamic doctrines enshrined in the Qur’an, exemplified in hadith & codified in Shari’ah violate human dignity, the right to life, the right to property, and the right to believe and practice as we see fit.
Islam’s doctrines & practices are standing violations of ICCPR, ICERD & CPPCG. Enforcible provisions of those international human rights covenants require the legal proscription of organizations which violate them. Islam must be outlawed!!
We can pound the facts and push the issue to the forefront. For this purpose, the International Qur’an Petition has been uttered & published. It makes the essential case and prays to the World Court for injunctive relief.
At http://www.crusadersarmory.co.cc/ you will find a link to the petition and links to its supporting evidence. You can join the crusade by signing the petition and sending it to everyone you can hope to influence, urging them to sign and forward it.
Open Doors and ACLJ have on line petitions against the pending resolution & protocol to ICERD. Sign and promote those petitions.
A sense of the House Resolution: H.Res.763 languishes in the Foreign Relations Cmte. Exhort your Congressman to sign on as a co-sponsor and demand a vote on the resolution before the G.A. votes on Defamation of Religions.
The time is now to rise up and disrespectfully demand the preservation of our most precious rights. If we can not honestly and accurately name, define & describe the enemy which assails us, we will be rendered defenseless.
November 19th, 2009 at 6:19 pm
I think what we do is declare gay people a “religious symbol”, then sign on with this Muslim effort.
November 23rd, 2009 at 8:55 am
Freedom of speech doesn’t give you the right to yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater when there isn’t one. Likewise, if you know what you say is going to get people killed, like what happened in Islamic countries after publication of the Muhammad cartoons, it would lead some to think you are abusing the freedom of speech. I don’t think that was the case with the Danish cartoons, though. How would the cartoonist know a bunch of Muslims would kill each other in Pakistan over a cartoon published in Denmark? When a cartoon is published slamming the pope in say America, do a bunch of Catholics start killing each other in Italy? These Muslims need to grow up and take a chill pill.
If your religion can’t take criticism, even if it is unfounded, then it is not going to be viable. At the heart of this is that these particular Muslims don’t want people thinking differently than they do. I don’t support defaming someone else’s religious beliefs, but I do support everyone’s right to disagree and let that disagreement be known. This is a really stupid idea, and if it ever gets to the U.N. General Assembly, it will only go to prove my opinion that the U.N. is nothing more (for the most part) than a bureaucratic waste of time and money.
November 23rd, 2009 at 11:44 am
You know… maybe these Muslim leaders need to just start out small… pick minor instances where restricting free speech about religion seems sensible to many… like maybe getting behind this notion that school valedictorians shouldn’t mention Christ, Faith, or anything “controversial” in their graduation addresses…
Or behind this misguided notion that religious institutions that engage in policy advocacy should loose their tax exempt status… maybe we can all work together to assure that no one of faith says anything significant in the public realm, and then in turn no one in the public realm ever says anything critical of religion….
November 23rd, 2009 at 2:50 pm
There are valid arguments for putting modest limits on freedom of speech. The fact that it might cause trouble, though, is not a good enough reason.
UK, you have lots of good company in wanting to protect the rights of religious groups to have a significant voice in the public forum. This ain’t that fight. There’s a distinction between protecting religion and underwriting it.
November 23rd, 2009 at 4:51 pm
When any faith is built up in sands needs protectionism. Of course, free speech is not licensed to speak freely. There must be some kind of balancing policy to maintain harmony of these two special characters of humanity (free speech vs. faith). Policy could be like the one found on separation of Church and State in broader sense to recognized importance of both characters in public life under UNO.