A report placed Pakistan at the top of a list
of 198 countries most suffering from social hostilities involving religion, by
the end of 2012.
The Pew Research Center’s report issued
two indices, based on statistics from the years 2007-2012:
1) The Government
Restrictions Index (GRI), which measures government laws, policies and actions
that restrict religious beliefs and practices.
2) The Social
Hostilities Index (SHI), which measures acts of religious hostility by private
individuals, organisations or groups in society.
The results show that
“Pakistan had the highest level of social hostilities involving religion, and
Egypt had the highest level of government restrictions on religion.”
Neighbours Afghanistan and
India were also up there with Pakistan in the SHI index.
Worldwide,
except for the Americas, “the share of countries with a high or very high
level of social hostilities involving religion reached a six-year peak in 2012,”
while ”the share of countries with a high or very high level
of government restrictions on religion stayed roughly the same in the
latest year studied.”
Pakistan topped the list
for most religious hostilities while showing a ‘very high’ range of scores in
the other index too.
https://twitter.com/pewresearch/status/423136878519263233
Global Trends
SHI - One third of 198 countries
reviewed saw high or very high levels of internal religious strife, such as
sectarian violence, terrorism or bullying in 2012, compared to 29 percent in
2011 and 20 percent in 2010.
The biggest rise came in
the Middle East and North Africa, two regions that are still feeling the
effects of the Arab Spring of 2010-2011, said the Pew Research Center.
As an example, the report
cites an increase in attacks on Coptic churches and Christian-owned businesses
in Egypt. It said China has also witnessed a big rise in religious conflict.
https://twitter.com/conradhackett/status/423109435817725953
PEW said that radical
elements often target mainstream Muslims and Christians in Pakistan,
Afghanistan and Somalia, while India has recurring tensions between its
majority Hindus and minority Muslims and Christians.
https://twitter.com/pewresearch/status/423127769719918592
Results for strong social
hostility such as anti-Semitic attacks, assaults by Muslims on churches
and Buddhist agitation against Muslims were the highest seen since the
series began, reaching 33 per cent of surveyed countries in 2012 after
29 per cent in 2011 and 20 per cent in mid-2007.
Christians and Muslims, who
make up more than half of the world’s population, have been stigmatised in the
largest number of countries. Muslims and Jews have suffered the greatest level
of hostility in six years, the report said.
Religious violence declined
in the Ivory Coast, Serbia, Ethiopia, Cyprus and Romania.
GRI - The number of countries
whose governments have imposed restrictions, such as bans on practicing a
religion or converting from one to another, has remained more or less the same,
however. Three out of ten countries have high or very high levels of
restrictions, the study said.
https://twitter.com/pewresearch/status/423130507371487232
Official bans, harassment
or other government interference in religion rose to 29 per cent of
countries surveyed in 2012 after 28 per cent in 2011 and 20 per cent in
mid-2007.
Harassment
against women and religious connotations of the way they dress has also risen in nearly a third of
countries to 32 per cent, compared to 25 per cent in 2011 and seven per cent in
2007.
The five countries with the
most government restrictions on religion are Egypt, China, Iran, Saudi
Arabia and Indonesia.
Among the 25 most heavily
populated countries, Egypt, Indonesia, Russia, Pakistan and Myanmar suffered
the most religious restrictions.
The 198 countries studied
account for more than 99.5 per cent of the world’s population, said the Pew
center.
It did not include North
Korea, whose government “is among the most repressive in the world, including
toward religion.”
The Washington-based
center, which is non-partisan and takes no policy position in its reports,
gave no reason for the rises noted in hostility against Christians,
Muslims, Jews and an “other” category including Sikhs, Bah’ais and atheists.
Hindus, Buddhists and folk religions saw lower levels of hostility and
little change in the past six years, according to the report’s extensive
data.
Increase in hostility
largest in Europe
Europe showed the largest
median increase in hostility due to a rise in harrassment of women because
of religious dress and violent attacks on minorities such as the murder of
a rabbi and three Jewish children by a radical in France.
Tensions in Israel arise
from the Palestinian issue, disagreements between secular and religious
Jews and the growth of ultra-Orthodox sects that live apart from the
majority.
Jews face hostility
The world’s two largest
faiths, Christianity and Islam, make up almost half the world’s population
and were the most widely targetted in 2012, facing official and social
hostility in 110 and 109 countries respectively.
Jews suffer hostility in 71
countries, even though they make up only 0.2 per cent of the world’s
population and about 80 per cent of them live in Israel and the United
States.
https://twitter.com/conradhackett/status/423114904561008640
The report said there were
probably more restrictions on religion around the world than its
statistics could document but its results could be considered “a good
estimate”.
It classified war and
terrorism as social hostility, arguing: “It is not always possible to
determine the degree to which they are religiously motivated or state
sponsored.”
http://tribune.com.pk/story/659005/pakistan-tops-list-of-countries-with-most-religious-hostilities-report/
No comments:
Post a Comment