Source: Human Rights Watch
(New York) – Burma’s
parliament should scrap a proposed religion law that would encourage
further repression and violence against Muslims and other religious
minorities, Human Rights Watch said today. The draft law on religious
conversions, published in the state-run media on May 27, 2014, would
impose unlawful restrictions on Burmese citizens wishing to change their
religion.
“Burma’s government is stoking communal tensions by considering a draft
law that will politicize religion and permit government intrusion on
decisions of faith,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director. “Following more than two years of anti-Muslim violence,
this law would put Muslims and other religious minorities in an even
more precarious situation.”
Under the draft law, any Burmese citizen who plans to change religion
must seek a series of permissions from local representatives of
government departments, including the Ministries of Religion, Education,
Immigration and Population, and Women’s Affairs, and wait 90 days for
permission to be granted. Penalties for failing to obtain government
permission to change one’s religion are not stated. Proselytizing,
forcing someone to convert, or insulting another religion would become
punishable by up to one year in prison.
The draft law was printed in full in Burmese language state media. Human
Rights Watch noted that the government provided a fax number for
citizens to send feedback to the Ministry of Religious Affairs, although
very few citizens in Burma have access to a fax machine.
If enacted, the bill would violate Burma’s obligations to uphold the
rights to freedom of religion, conscience, and expression under
international law. The proposed restrictions on conversion,
proselytizing, and speech contravene the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, which states that “[e]veryone has the right to freedom of
thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change
his religion or belief, and freedom;” and that “[e]veryone has the right
to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom … to
seek, receive and impart information and ideas.”
The proposed law could also violate the rights of women
“freely to choose a spouse and to enter into marriage,” under the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women (CEDAW), to which Burma is a party.
Burma’s 2008 Constitution in article 34 provides that citizens may
“freely profess and practice religion subject to public order, morality
or health,” and article 348 ensures that the state “shall not
discriminate against any citizen … based on race, birth, religion,
official position, status, culture, sex and wealth.”
“Requiring government permission to change one’s faith breaches every
tenet of religious freedom and provides officials wide latitude to act
arbitrarily and deny permission,” Adams said. “The draft religion law is
a recipe for further outrages against Burma’s Muslim minority. Rather
than pandering to Buddhist extremists, the government should be acting
to bridge the divides that threaten Burma’s fragile reform process.”
The Ministry of Religious Affairs drafted the law as part of a series of
four laws related to marriage, religion, polygamy, and family planning
proposed by a Buddhist organization called the Association for the
Protection of Race and Religion (or its Burmese acronym, Ma Ba Tha)
connected to the nationalist Buddhist monk movement known as “969.” The
four draft laws had been sent to President Thein Sein in mid-2013.
Thein Sein and the speaker of the national assembly, Thura Shwe Mann,
instructed relevant ministries and departments to convert the monks’
draft laws into government-endorsed drafts to be considered by the
public before being introduced into the lower house of parliament after
June 20 in the assembly’s current session.
A senior leader of the group, U Wirathu, has been quoted in the media
saying that “[Muslims] are breeding so fast and they are stealing our
women, raping them.” He also said most of Burma’s Muslims are “radical,
bad people.”
While the laws are widely perceived to be directed against Burma’s
Muslim minority, particularly the long-persecuted and effectively
stateless Rohingya minority in Arakan State, the country’s sizeable
Christian minority would also be negatively affected.
On May 6, 97 Burmese women’s groups and community organizations signed a joint petition to the government decrying the inter-faith marriage law.
Responding to this petition, nationalist monks referred to these groups
as “lice that live under the skin,” and Wirathu referred to them as traitors.
Nationalist monks have exerted increasing influence in Burmese public
life since the political reform process started, and have targeted
Muslim communities and international Muslim organizations such as the
Organization of Islamic Cooperation.
Human Rights Watch’s investigations into violence in western Burma’s Arakan State in 2012 found evidence that security forces and government-backed groups committed crimes against humanity in a campaign of
“ethnic cleansing” against Rohingya and other Muslims. More than
180,000 Rohingya remain internally displaced; many others have fled the
country.
“The government’s failure to address anti-Muslim repression and violence
in the country is a powder keg waiting to be lit,” Adams said.
“International donors, investors, and governments need to vocally oppose
this law and other laws and policies that could result in long-term
religious discrimination in Burma.”