Secular Rescue was recently able to help Lubna Ahmed, chemical engineering student and human rights activist, escape Iraq and move to the United States. Learn more about her story on The Rubin Report:
Secular Rescue was recently able to help Lubna Ahmed, chemical engineering student and human rights activist, escape Iraq and move to the United States. Learn more about her story on The Rubin Report:
Around the world, militant extremists have harassed, attacked, and murdered secularists and dissidents for daring to promote and defend secular government and fundamental human rights. In some countries, including most recently Bangladesh, this problem is particularly severe, and new threats emerge across the globe every day.
Secular Rescue is a program of the Center for Inquiry designed to provide emergency assistance to writers, bloggers, publishers, and activists who face threats due to their beliefs or expressions regarding religion.
Generous public support has allowed the Center for Inquiry to assist more than two dozen individuals and their families in escaping to safety, either temporarily or permanently.
Read about some of our biggest success stories here.
However, many others remain in danger. Through Secular Rescue, CFI will continue to raise funds for this important cause so that we can act quickly and decisively before another individual is attacked. 100 percent of funds donated go to helping those at risk.
Please give now so that we can help these courageous defenders of secularism and freedom of religion, belief, and expression.
*This program was originally launched as the Freethought Emergency Fund in 2015 and relaunched as Secular Rescue on International Blasphemy Rights Day 2016.
Note: this is the fifth in a series of five posts leading up to, and marking, International Blasphemy Rights Day on September 30.
Today is International Blasphemy Rights Day, when we show our solidarity with those who face persecution and violence for daring to criticize or question religion. But today we also mark another dark day in order to make a powerful difference.
On February 26, 2015, machete-wielding militants attacked humanist writers and activists Avijit Roy and Bonya Ahmed as they left a book fair in Dhaka, Bangladesh, leaving Roy dead and Ahmed seriously injured. It was not the first attack on a secularist in Bangladesh — in 2013 Ahmed Rajib Haider was killed, and Asif Mohiuddin seriously injured — but it was perhaps the highest-profile attack in recent years.
Little did we know that it was the first of many more to come. Individuals connected to militant Islamist groups have claimed responsibility for the murders of several secularists and progressive activists in Bangladesh since 2015.
In order to help the countless others who remained at grave risk, the Center for Inquiry launched the Freethought Emergency Fund, a program aimed at relocating threatened secularists and activists to safety. In the past 15 months, we have helped more than a dozen people, including entire families (you can read more about this work here).
Sadly, in 2016 attacks have continued and widened in scope. Recent attacks have claimed religious minorities — including Christians, Hindus, Sufis, and Shias — professors, students, LGBT activists, and even the wife of a police investigator. And terrorists continue to threaten the lives of a number of writers, bloggers, publishers, and activists in the country.
Given the tremendous amount of work it has accomplished, the Freethought Emergency Fund’s balance has dwindled, and so we need more money to help people who remain at risk.
That is why today, on International Blasphemy Rights Day, CFI is relaunching the this important program as Secular Rescue, with a special matching donation offer.
Watch our video announcing Secular Rescue.
Today only — make your dollar go three times as far!
Yes, you read that correctly: through the generosity of two CFI supporters, Douglas Kinney and another donor who wants to remain anonymous, if you give to Secular Rescue today your donation will be matched two-to-one, up to $15,000!
So your $20 donation will be worth $60 to threatened secularists in the world.
Your $100 donation will be worth $300 to writers in exile.
And a $1,000 donation will be worth a remarkable $3,000 to a family in fear of violence and death from extremist forces.
We have never had such a remarkable challenge gift for this program.
But there’s a catch.
We only receive the match if we receive your donation. So if our friends (yes, that means you!) don’t step up to the plate, the $10,000 will be kaput. Gone. Not available for distribution to people in danger. Yes, it’s that dire. Do your part right now by going to the Secular Rescue website, and see your gift tripled.
Lead by example, and let your friends know this is going on. No matter the size of the gift, it will be tripled. But this offer is only on the table today, so make the most of this generous opportunity!
Thank you for taking part in this week’s activities around International Blasphemy Rights Day. Please continue to learn more about this issue, to speak out, and to stand up for free expression.
Remember, ideas don’t need rights. People do.
Note: this is the fourth in a series of five posts leading up to, and marking, International Blasphemy Rights Day on September 30.
Over the past couple days, followers of our posts leading up to International Blasphemy Rights Day (IBRD) have learned about blasphemy laws and related violence, helped to educate their communities regarding the harm of blasphemy laws and the importance of free expression, and worked to get blasphemy on the minds of the US presidential candidates and into the campaign conversation. Now it’s time to take concrete action against blasphemy laws and for free expression.
If you live outside the U.S., the most effective way to take political action is to search for contact information — phone number or email address — of your elected officials and place a brief call (for some relevant tips, click here) or send a brief message (for some relevant tips, click here) telling them that you are a constituent, and that you have a concern that’s very important to you.
If you live in the U.S., the the most effective way to take political action is to target Congress, which is currently considering a measure that calls for the global repeal of blasphemy laws and takes to task countries which restrict the right to freedom of expression for religious reasons. There are two ways to take action on this measure.
It’s 2016. Our civilization must move past the backward idea that religious beliefs must be protected from criticism or inquiry by criminalizing dissent. But with your help, with your voice, through combined action, we can change the world.
Learn more about how to get involved in International
Blasphemy Rights Day and advocate for free expression on
the take action page of the Campaign for Free Expression.
Come back tomorrow for an important announcement for International Blasphemy Rights Day.
Note: this is the third in a series of five posts leading up to, and marking, International Blasphemy Rights Day on September 30.
As we lead up to International Blasphemy Rights Day (IBRD) on Friday, we’ve been sharing resources from the Campaign for Free Expression aimed at helping to inform you about the nature of blasphemy laws, as well as their terrible impact in societies around the world. Now that you know more about it, it’s time to tell everyone else.
Despite the widespread use of blasphemy laws in countries around the world, and despite the ongoing crisis of blasphemy-related violence, the issue remains under the radar for post people. But there are several simple ways that you can help to change that, using the tools you have right in front of you, or holding in your hand right now. Here are three:
Learn more about how to get involved in International Blasphemy Rights Day and advocate for free expression on the Take Action page of the Campaign for Free Expression. And make sure to come back here tomorrow for more.
Thanat Thanawatcharanon, also know as Tom Dundee, 58, was a celebrity in Thailand for over a decade as a singer in the band Zu Zu. In 2010, he gave up doing concerts to become a leader of the Red Shirts (or United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship), giving speeches at rallies. During this time, he was denounced by royalist watchdogs (the Network of Volunteer Citizens to Protect the Monarchy) for insulting the monarchy in some of these speeches.
The Thai constitution states that “The King shall be enthroned in a position of revered worship and shall not be violated. No person shall expose the King to any sort of accusation or action.” Section 112 of Thai Criminal Code states: “Whoever defames, insults or threatens the King, the Queen, the Heir-apparent or the Regent, shall be punished with imprisonment of three to fifteen years.” We do not actually know what Tom Dundee or Thanat Thanawatcharanon said to cause the lese majesty accusation, because the alleged insults cannot be repeated.
Thanat’s case dragged out until after the May 2014 coup led by Prayut Chan-ocha. Sentences for royal insults have become increasingly harsh under the junta, which justifies itself as protector of the monarchy. Thanat Thanawatcharanon a first he denied he was guilty of lese majesty, but after 11 months he confessed, as most lese majesty prisoners do in hope of receiving a pardon or a lenient sentence. However, on June 1, 2016, he was given a sentence was 7.5 years. In addition, the royalist judge added that after he is released, he must compose a song promoting national reconciliation and plant trees in honor of the king.
On July 11, 2016, he was punished again for the same statements, when he was sentenced to several additional years under the Computer Crimes Act, which came into play because his speeches had been posted online. This brings the total time he will be imprisoned to 10 years, 10 months. He remains in jail separated from his wife and family. He can be pardoned by the King.
For more information on this case, please see the Thai Alliance for Human Rights.
This section will be updated as news develops on this
case.
Note: this is the second in a series of five posts leading up to, and marking, International Blasphemy Rights Day on September 30.
Every day, news outlets report on new accusations of blasphemy somewhere in the world. Someone is being charged or defamed with allegations of insulting or criticizing religion, and lives are being ruined. But it can be difficult to understand these individual cases when they pop up in so many different countries with unfamiliar cultures, where what’s considered “offensive” can change from place to place.
And besides, what is the international law on blasphemy? Where do blasphemy laws exist? What are the different kinds of blasphemy laws? What are the punishments? And which governments or groups are the worst offenders?
Don’t worry. CFI has compiled clear and accessible resources that can help you find answers to these questions, and get a solid handle on the issue.
For example, did you know that blasphemy is an internationally protected right? The UN Human Rights Committee, which tracks and interprets the treaty International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, made clear in 2011 that “Prohibitions of displays of lack of respect for a religion or other belief system, including blasphemy laws, are incompatible with the Covenant.”
Or, did you know that more than one-quarter of the world’s countries and territories (26%) have anti-blasphemy laws or policies, and that more than one-in-ten (13%) nations had laws or policies penalizing apostasy? The legal punishments for such transgressions vary from fines to death. That data comes thanks to the Pew Research Center.
There is much more to learn about blasphemy and laws against it. You can dig into this information on the resources page of the Campaign for Free Expression. Come back tomorrow for even more on this important issue.
Note: this is the first in a series of five posts leading up to, and marking, International Blasphemy Rights Day on September 30.
Tonight, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will face off in the first presidential debate of the 2016 campaign. Moderator Lester Holt, of NBC Nightly News, is expected to raise a number of issues with the candidates — taxes, health care, foreign policy, all the things we expect. However, neither Holt nor the candidates are expected to raise the issue that we are highlighting this week, an issue that chokes off the right to free expression and destroys the lives of those who speak out. We’re talking, of course, about blasphemy laws.
The United States has relations with many governments around the world that criminalize criticism of religious ideas, and relations with many more that are in a position to pressure such governments. Yet many countries continue to jail individuals for blasphemy, or else passively look on while individuals accused of blasphemy are persecuted, attacked, or killed, with no sign of change. Is the U.S. government really doing all it can to push for the end of blasphemy laws?
You can help try to put this issue on the presidential campaign radar tonight by tweeting tough questions about blasphemy laws with the International Blasphemy Rights Day (IBRD) and presidential debate hashtags.
Here are two sample Tweets:
“Do you think the U.S. government has adequately addressed blasphemy laws? What would you do differently?” #blasphemyday #HofDebate16
“What kind of pressure should the US put on countries that criminalize blasphemy?” #blasphemyday #HofDebate16
With your help, we can raise this issue’s profile by putting
blasphemy laws and the struggle for free expression into the
mainstream conversation — whether the candidates and the
major networks address them or not. Their silence could
speak volumes.
You can learn more about International Blasphemy Rights
Day and the Campaign for Free Expression
here. And be sure to come back here tomorrow for more on the
fight for free expression.
As reported by the Associated Press:
Pakistani police say they have arrested a 16-year-old Christian boy on blasphemy charges after he “liked” an “inappropriate” photograph on Facebook of the Kaaba in Mecca, one of the holiest sites in Islam.
Senior police official Akhtar Ansari said Wednesday the arrest was made this week in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province.
He says police have sent the boy to jail pending trial.
Ansari says police made the arrest after being alerted of the Facebook post by a Muslim, who said he found it insulting.
Under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws, anyone accused of insulting Islam can be sentenced to death. However the laws are also sometimes used to settle personal scores and target minorities.
Vatican Radio reports that the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has urged Pakistan to revoke its draconian blasphemy law. From the article:
The commission based in Geneva, in its periodic report on Pakistan released on August 26, stated that misuse of blasphemy laws is surging in the heavily Islamic country.
The Commission based in Geneva “takes note of the state’s efforts to prevent the abuse of blasphemy laws”, but also expresses concern about “efforts for the broad and vague definition of crimes against religion under articles of the law”, which consists of some articles of the penal Code of Pakistan, and notes “the disproportionate use of those laws against individuals belonging to ethnic and religious minorities”.
The UN Committee in its report, expressed concerns relating “the high number of blasphemy cases based on false accusations with no related investigations and prosecutions, the judges who judge cases of blasphemy face intimidation, death threats and murders.”
You can read the full article here.