Religious intolerance on rise - study

WASHINGTON – Nearly one-third of the world’s population lives in countries where it is becoming more difficult to freely practise…

WASHINGTON – Nearly one-third of the world’s population lives in countries where it is becoming more difficult to freely practise religion, a private US research group reported yesterday.

The Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion and Public Life said government restrictions and public hostility involving religion grew in some of the most populous countries from mid-2006 to mid-2009.

“During the three-year period covered by the study, the extent of violence and abuse related to religion increased in more places than it decreased,” according to the report, “Rising Restrictions on Religion”. Only about 1 per cent of the world lives in countries that saw more religious tolerance during those years, it said.

The Pew Center review of 198 countries found those deemed restrictive or hostile in the previous report were growing even more so, while the opposite was found for those with more religious tolerance.

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A substantial rise in public hostility towards religious groups was seen in China, Nigeria, Thailand, Vietnam and Britain, while government restrictions rose substantially in Egypt and France.

The report looked at laws or other policies aimed to ban particular faiths, limit preaching, give preference to particular religions or prohibit conversions. To measure hostility, it looked at sectarian violence, harassment over religious attire and other types of intimidation. Countries most restrictive or hostile towards certain religions included India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Egypt, Iran, China, Burma (Myanmar), Russia, Turkey, Vietnam, Nigeria and Bangladesh – though most of these did not show much change in the three years. People were killed, physically abused, detained, imprisoned, displaced, or had their property destroyed for religious reasons by governments in 101 countries in the year ending mid-2009, compared to 91 a year earlier. – (Reuters)