US denounces rising tide of anti-Muslim, anti-Jewish sentiment

In a wide-ranging annual report on religious freedom, the US State Department voiced alarm at growing attacks against minority groups around the world.

Powered by automated translation

WASHINGTON // The United States denounced what it called a rising tide of both anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish sentiment around the world as it urged all nations to ensure freedom of religion.

In a wide-ranging annual report on religious freedom, the US State Department voiced alarm at growing attacks against minority groups and painted a bleak picture in nations such as China, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea and Saudi Arabia.

John Kerry, while acknowledging that the US record was not perfect, called religious freedom a "universal value" as he presented the report.

"The freedom to profess and practice one's faith — to believe or not to believe, or to change one's beliefs — that is a birthright of every human being," the US secretary of state said.

"I urge all countries, especially those identified in this report, to take action now to safeguard this fundamental freedom," he said.

Kerry announced the appointment of Ira Forman, who served as President Barack Obama's campaign outreach director to Jewish voters, to fill the State Department position of special envoy to combat anti-Semitism.

The report said anti-Semitism was rising in the media of Egypt and Venezuela, where failed presidential candidate Henrique Capriles has Jewish ancestry, and pointed to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's remarks questioning the extent of the Holocaust.

The State Department report, which covered 2012, said that "anti-Muslim rhetoric and actions were clearly on the rise — particularly in Europe and Asia."

"Government restrictions, which often coincided with societal animosity, resulted in anti-Muslim actions that affected everyday life for numerous believers," it said.

The report sharply criticised the record of Myanmar on the same day that President Thein Sein met with US President Barack Obama in a sign of US support for the former general's democratic reforms.

"On Burma, we didn't see any improvement in religious freedom," said Suzan Johnson Cook, the ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom, using Myanmar's former name.

The State Department report pointed to allegations that officials in Myanmar fanned a wave of violence targeting the mostly Muslim Rohingya community and said that Myanmar promoted Theravada Buddhism over other faiths.

The survey said that religious freedom declined further in China and that authorities cracked down particularly hard on the mostly Muslim Uighur community and on Tibetan Buddhists, whose monasteries are under close watch.

The report said that Muslims also faced new restrictions in 2012 in countries ranging from Belgium, which banned face-covering religious attire in classrooms, to India where schools in Mangalore restricted headscarves.

The report also voiced alarm at soaring violence against Islamic minorities including Shiites and Ahmadis in Pakistan, where laws restrict the Ahmadi community from even calling itself Muslim.

The study also voiced concern for Ahmadis in Indonesia and Bahais in Iran. It said blasphemy laws were widely abused in Islamic countries including Pakistan, where incidents last year included the detention of a mentally challenged girl.

The State Department did not spare Bahrain from criticism, saying that the island's Shiite majority "continued to face official discrimination" and allegations of torture.