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FRANCE

FECRIS denounced at the United Nations’ Human Rights Council
(Version française ici)

PAKISTAN

Life sentence upheld for Christian in blasphemy case

HRWF Database of FORB Prisoners contains 47 documented cases: 23 Protestants - 15 Sunnis - 5 Ahmadis - 2 Anglicans - 1 Catholic - 1 Shia.


30 June 2021
 
Website: https://hrwf.eu


FRANCE

FECRIS denounced at the United Nations’ Human Rights Council

CAP-LC filed a written statement detailing the defamation cases FECRIS and its affiliated organizations lost, and asking France to stop supporting them.

By Massimo Introvigne

  
Bitter Winter (28.06.2021) - https://bit.ly/3Agkafp - Readers of Bitter Winter are familiar with FECRIS (European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Cults and Sects), an umbrella organization created in 1994 to put together anti-cult associations in several European (and some non-European) countries. We criticized FECRIS inter alia for supporting China’s horrific persecution of Falun Gong and other religious movements. FECRIS promotes the anti-cult ideology, recognized in 2020 by a USCIRF (U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom) document as a major threat for freedom of religion or belief.

CAP-LC (Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience), an NGO with special consultative status at the United Nations’ ECOSOC (Economic and Social Council), the same status enjoyed by FECRIS, has now filed a written statement to the 47th Session of the United Nations’ Human Rights Council, which was published on 21 June, and asks France to stop its support of FECRIS.

CAP-LC is concerned with the reorganization of the French governmental anti-cult mission MIVILUDES, now under the supervision of the Minister Delegate for Citizenship at the Ministry of the Interior, Marlène Schiappa. She has increased MIVILUDES’ present budget ten-fold, to euro 1 million euro per year, CAP-LC reports, and has announced “that this million will be allocated to initiatives that would be run by anti-cult associations, namely CCMM and UNADFI,” both FECRIS affiliates.

CAP-LC notes that CCMM and UNADFI refer to themselves as NGOs but are in fact GONGOs (Governmental Non-Government Associations), since 90% of their funding comes from the French government. Representatives of both FECRIS affiliates have been included in the newly appointed Orientation Committee of the MIVILUDES. FECRIS is registered in France and is also directly funded by the French government. (…)

Read full article of Bitter Winter here

Read the full submission of CAP-LC to the U.N. here

Photo: Palais des Nations in Geneva, where the UN Human Rights Council meets (credits).




PAKISTAN

Life sentence upheld for Christian in blasphemy case
Islamist pressure again appears to influence judges in Pakistan.


Morning Star News ( 27.06.2021) - https://bit.ly/3h4HG7B - A court in Rawalpindi, Pakistan upheld the life sentence of a Christian convicted of sending blasphemous text messages in spite of the prosecution’s manipulated evidence and failure to establish his involvement, his lawyer said.
 
Zafar Bhatti, 56, had been handed the life sentence, which in Pakistan is 25 years, on May 3, 2017, under Section 295-C of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws for allegedly sending text messages derogatory to Islam’s prophet. The Christian continues to deny the charge.
 
On Tuesday (June 22), an additional sessions judge in Rawalpindi District upheld Bhatti’s conviction even though new evidence presented by the prosecution again failed to directly link Bhatti with the alleged offense, according to his attorney.
 
In a bid to convert his life term into a death sentence, the complainant in the case, Ibrar Ahmed Khan, last year filed an application in the Lahore High Court (LHC) Rawalpindi Bench seeking forensic examination of cellular company audio samples to try to establish Bhatti’s direct involvement in the texts, attorney Tahir Bashir said.
 
Police had obtained audio samples from the cellular company during the trial, but they could not be examined forensically due to absence of a testing facility at that time, he said.
 
Police obtained samples from three people, including the SIM card’s registered owner, Ghazala Khan, who used to work with Bhatti.
 
“When someone calls the cellular company for activation of the SIM card, their voices are recorded,” Bashir said. “In this case, the SIM used in the alleged offense was activated thrice – the first two times by some people related to Ms. Khan, and the third time by the woman herself. Bhatti never possessed the SIM, but his phone set was mysteriously used to send those blasphemous text messages. It’s quite clear that the convict was trapped in the case through his phone.”
 
Khan was also arrested and charged with blasphemy in 2012. At her trial in April 2013, Justice Khalid Mehmood of the LHC Rawalpindi Bench refused to pass judgment against her and instead tried to convince the complainant to forgive her. Khan said she was innocent and did not want forgiveness but to be freed on merit.
 
The judge showed leniency and granted her bail. She died in November 2016 from Hepatitis C, aged 39.
 
Bashir said that on April 15, LHC Rawalpindi Bench Justice Sadaqat Ali Khan remanded the case to Rawalpindi Additional Sessions Judge Sahibzada Naqeeb Sultan with the direction to complete the examination of “new evidence” within two months.
 
Citing “evidence manipulation,” Bashir said that the CD allegedly containing Bhatti’s voice sample from the cellular company’s records turned out to be blank when it was played in court.
 
“The police then sought time from the judge and manufactured a new CD containing Bhatti’s audio samples from the recordings that were made in the presence of a magistrate during the trial in 2017,” he said. “They presented this CD as a record from the cellular company even as I argued that the audio record should be directly summoned from the company.”
 
During the initial trial, the judge was not satisfied with the evidence purported to incriminate Bhatti, so he had sentenced him to life imprisonment even though the mandatory punishment under Section 295-C is death, the attorney said.
 
“The trial court judge had given the verdict under immense pressure, because the complainant was an office bearer of the Islamist extremist outfit Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat,” Bashir said. “I believe the verdict delivered this time was also under pressure, because there’s no direct evidence against Bhatti.”
 
Lower court judges routinely hesitate to make rulings based on merit or free those accused of blasphemy, instead transferring their burden to higher courts while the accused and their families suffer.
 
Bashir said that he had filed an appeal against Bhatti’s conviction in the Lahore High Court in 2017, but it had been repeatedly adjourned on one pretext or the other over the years.
 
“On the other hand, the LHC ordered reexamination of the evidence on a single application by the complainant,” he said. “It’s very unfortunate that innocent people are made to suffer in jail, and their appeals are kept pending by the higher courts for years.”
Despite the “disappointing verdict” and delay tactics, he said he was still hopeful that the LHC would accept his appeal and order Bhatti’s acquittal.
 
Church officials and human rights groups say blasphemy allegations are frequently used not only to settle personal scores but to target religious minorities in Pakistan.
 
A Senate Special Committee on Human Rights and the Islamabad High Court in 2018 recommended that those making false blasphemy accusations be given the same punishments as those for blasphemy convictions, but the government dismissed the recommendation. The recommendation also stated that anyone registering a blasphemy case at a police station must bring two witnesses.
 
While punishment for blasphemy ranges from several years in prison to death in Pakistan, a person making a false accusation faces potential punishment of only six months in prison or a fine of 1,000 rupees (US$6). Successive governments have acknowledged that the blasphemy laws are blatantly misused, but little effort has been made to stop the abuses.
 
Rights activists say it’s unlikely that any government will move to repeal or amend the blasphemy laws due to fierce Islamist sentiments in the Muslim-majority country. They say Pakistani authorities must be urged to immediately implement effective procedural and institutional safeguards at the investigative, prosecutorial and judicial levels to prevent abuse of these laws.
 
At least 35 people in prison in 2020 received death sentences for blasphemy, compared with 29 the previous year, according to the U.S. State Department’s 2020 International Religious Freedom Report. The report cites the Center for Social Justice, a national Non-Governmental Organization, as reporting that at least 199 people were accused of blasphemy offenses in 202, the highest number of blasphemy cases in a single year in the country’s history. Most of the accused were Shia (70 percent of cases) and Ahmadis (20 percent), according to the report.
 
The U.S. State Department in December re-designated Pakistan among nine other “Countries of Particular Concern” for severe violations of religious freedom. Previously Pakistan had been added to the list on Nov. 28, 2018.
 
Pakistan ranked fifth on Christian support organization Open Doors 2021 World Watch list of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian.
 
 
Photo : Market in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. (Trueblood7886, Creative Commons)



Disclaimer: Human Rights Without Frontiers (HRWF) publishes information from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these communications are not necessarily those of HRWF.
Willy Fautré is the Editor-in-Chief. 


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Other HRWF newsletters: Human Rights in the World | LGBTQI People & Human Rights | Religion & Security | Women's Rights & Gender Equality





Some activities in 2021


 
HRWF director participating in a debate about human rights in North Korea after a theatre performance in Brussels (25.06.2021)
 
HRWF publishing an article in The European Times about massacres of Amharas in Ethiopia (21.06.2021)
 
Participation of HRWF director in a press conference about inter-ethnic violence in Ethiopia (16.06.2021)


HRWF co-organizing with One World Human Rights Film Festival a debate on human rights in North Korea (03.06.2021)
 
HRWF co-organizing with the FORB Roundtable EU-Brussels a webinar on the Flemish Decree on religious communities (02.06.2021)


HRWF co-organizing a webinar with CESNUR about the fiscal persecution of Tai Ji Men on the U.N. International Day of Culture, Diversity, Dialogue and Development (24.05.2021)
 
Interview by Radio Free Asia about the Human Rights Documentary Film Festival in Brussels (20.05.2021)


 HRWF co-organizing a webinar with CESNUR about the Ghent Court decision against Jehovah’s Witnesses (09.04.2021)

HRWF co-organizing a webinar with CESNUR about the fiscal persecution of Tai Ji Men on the U.N. International Day of Conscience (06.04.2021)
 
HRWF co-organizing a webinar with CESNUR about the fiscal persecution of Tai Ji Men on the U.N. Day of the Right to Truth about Human Rights Violations (24.03.2021)
 
HRWF co-signing a petition addressed to the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka about the anti-conversion bill (23.03.2021)
 
HRWF co-signing a petition addressed to the President and the Government of Uzbekistan to decriminalize same-sex conduct (06.03.2021)
 
HRWF director presenting a research paper titled “Campaign Against Jehovah’s Witnesses About Alleged Sexual Abuse in Belgium” at the online conference “Limitations of religious freedom in Europe” organized by two universities in Germany and Poland (04-06.03.2021).

HHans Noot (HRWF) organizing a webinar about the confiscation of Baha’i properties in Ivel/ Iran (26.02.2021)

HRWF director publishing an article about a criminal case concerning Jehovah’s Witnesses in Belgium (26.02.2021)

HRWF co-signing with other 16 NGOs a letter to Sweden’s Prime Minister to prevent the deportation of a Uighur Muslim back to China (12.02.2021)

HRWF director participating in a webinar organized par LIREC (Rome) about “USCIRF Report on religious persecution in Russia & FORB Violations in Europe” with a paper titled “The Activities of FECRIS in EU Member States (29.01.2021)
 
HRWF director raising the issue of the persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia in a webinar organized by EPRID in Brussels with Markus Grübel, the Federal Government Commissioner for Global Freedom of Religion (27.01.2021)

HRWF co-organizing a webinar about the fiscal persecution of the Taoist group Tail Ji Men in Taiwan (24.01.2021)

HRWF co-signing a letter along dozens of NGOs to President Jo Biden to keep religious freedom a high priority (16.01.2021)
 
Co-authoring and publishing a White Paper on the French bill on “separatisms” (11.01.2021)
 

Human Rights Without Frontiers Int'l www.hrwf.eu Phone: +32 2 345 61 45