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The U.N. General Assembly
has passed the non-binding Defamation of Religion
Resolution for the fifth year in a row, reports MNN.
However, support is eroding, says Open Doors Advocacy
Director Lindsay Vessey. The Islamic-sponsored
non-binding resolution passed with 80 votes in favor, 61
against and 42 abstentions. That compared with 86 votes
to 53, with 42 abstentions for a similar text last year,
and figures of 108-51-25 in 2007, the last time the
measure commanded an absolute majority of U.N. members.
Open Doors USA helped to lead the advocacy effort at the
United Nations to prevent this resolution from passing.
Open Doors lobbied key voting countries, organized a
petition drive for Open Doors USA supporters to campaign
against the resolution and spoke on this issue to the
media. The Open Doors advocacy campaign is called "Free
to Believe."
Oppenents say it threatens freedom of speech, especially
for minority Christians in Muslim-dominated nations.
"Essentially the resolution tried to criminalize words
or actions that are deemed to be against a particular
religion, namely, Islam."
Vessey warns that the Organization of Islamic Conference
is organizing a sneak attack in March. "Instead of being
a non-binding resolution, they're actually trying to
pass it through a separate committee that would make it
more of a binding resolution--it would make it an
optional protocol."
The UN Ad Hoc Committee on the Elaboration of
Complementary Standards is expected to meet again in the
spring to discuss adding the resolution to the
International Covenant on the Elimination of all forms
of Racial Discrimination.
Open Doors is readying an advocacy response to the
threat. It's one short step, but Vessey says under it,
"People aren't free to preach the Gospel--people aren't
free to say what they believe even if they're not trying
to evangelize. But it's also going to impact
missionaries and foreign workers who go into these
countries to evangelize.”
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