LEGAL ISSUES AFFECTING RELIGIOUS FREEDOM: ASIA AREA JULY 8, 2015

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Transcription:

LEGAL ISSUES AFFECTING RELIGIOUS FREEDOM: ASIA AREA JULY 8, 2015

Asia Area: Background Includes 22 countries/territories Of the 22, the LDS Church has activities or operations in 18 Nothing in Bhutan, Brunei, the Maldives, or Timor-Leste

Twenty-two Countries/Territories Mongolia Pakistan India Nepal China Myanmar Laos Bangladesh Thailand Cambodia Sri Lanka Indonesia Malaysia Taiwan Hong Kong Macau Vietnam Singapore

Mongolia Pakistan 4,200 Miles China Taiwan United States India Thailand Hong Kong 4,200 Miles Singapore Indonesia

Half of the World s Population 3.5 Billion

26 of the World s 50 Largest Urban Areas Lahore Delhi Karachi Ahmedabad Mumbai Hyderabad Dhaka Kolkata Beijing Tianjin Shanghai Chengdu Wuhan Chongqing Hangzhou Taipei Guangzhou Dongguan Shenzhen Hong Kong Bangalore Chennai Bangkok Ho Chi Minh City Population Over 20 Million 10 20 Million Kuala Lumpur 6 10 Million Jakarta

95% Non-Christian Number of Adherents in the Asia Area As a Percent of Worldwide Totals Hindu 99% (1 Billion) Muslim 46% (740M) Buddhist 87% (423M) Folk Religions 89% (360M) Christian 7% (147M) LDS 1% (0.17M)

Over 1,000 Languages Spoken 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 299 398 706 138 116 121 109 Bangladesh Cambodia China Hong Kong India Indonesia Laos Macau Malaysia Mongolia Myanmar Nepal Pakistan Singapore Sri Lanka Taiwan Thailand Vietnam

Asia Area: Religious Liberty Issues Significant variations in attitudes and approaches across the twenty-two countries Significant room for improved understanding and application in all or nearly all countries

General Asia Western World broad enjoyment of core religious liberty rights is not well established Minorities face discrimination if not persecution. Too often, governmental actors are involved if only by the failure to protect.

General Some few countries act directly to deny or impair fundamental religious liberty rights of individuals Right to chose and hold one s religion Right to practice or manifest one s religion (at least in private settings) Not at all unusual for countries to withhold/impair effective means of exercising fundamental rights

General Institutional rights are subjected to greater regulation and interference than individual rights Focus here is on institutions, and particularly the situation as it relates to the LDS Church

Registration A significant issue in some countries relates to the registration of religious groups or organizations Believers cannot meet for collective worship without registering a religious group with the government Registration requirements are difficult or impossible to meet

Legal Personality In some countries, even if registration is not a hurdle, some powers are available only if the group has legal personality (only if a Church legal entity is established). Rent meetinghouses premises Open bank accounts Contract for goods and services Import religious and other materials Receive funding

Legal Personality (continued) Even when possible to register a Church entity, local law or practice may constrain the manner in which the entity is governed and operated Officers and directors may not subject to Church appointment or direction Church reputation, funds, and assets may be outside its control Involvement of foreigners may be limited

Visas Religious organizations face significant difficulties bringing international volunteers to some of the countries of the Asia Area. Administrative and supervisory visitors Resident in-country senior volunteers (couples) Resident in-country young volunteers (missionaries)

Visas (continued) Notwithstanding the missionaries volunteer (and uncompensated) status, some countries treat missionary activity as work and missionaries as religious workers. This brings into play restrictive visa regimes and foreign worker quotas.

Proselytization and Conversion Some countries seek to regulate proselytization and conversion. Criminal offense to proselytize Conversion from one religion to another but only with government Conduct-based anti-conversion laws Vague formulations lend themselves to abuse.

Not Grounded Solely in Malice Religion is viewed as a matter of ethnic and national identity Historical experience with religion as an aspect of control/interference by foreign (colonial) power Fear of religion as undermining social cohesion The LDS operating model is somewhat unique Concerns over Islamic fundamentalism

Some Control Things we cannot control but much we can. Establishing relationships of trust is criticial. Vietnam India

China Government policy is guided by the Three Self principles, with readily-apparently implications for religious activity in China. Self Support Self Administration Self Propagation

Summary Mongolia Pakistan India Nepal China Myanmar Laos Bangladesh Thailand Cambodia Sri Lanka Taiwan Hong Kong Macau Vietnam Malaysia Singapore Indonesia

NEAR-TERM OUTLOOK

Registration and legal personality hurdles to remain in place difficult but negotiable Visa difficulties to moderate General understanding to improve (work of the Center)

Increased use of religion as a wedge issue by persons seeking political power (perversely, an increase in political pluralism can lead to an increase in the use of religion as a wedge issue) Government failures to protect religious liberties against private actors Facility zoning and permitting

End

Economies Advanced Urban Church and Economic Development Macau Hong Kong Singapore Taiwan Mixed Rural-Urban Sri Lanka Vietnam Bangladesh Laos Myanmar Rural Nepal Emerging Thailand Malaysia India Indonesia Cambodia Pakistan Mongolia Developing Church Development Established

Per Capita Income* Bangladesh $3,300 Bhutan $7,600 Brunei $73,000 Cambodia $3,000 China $13,000 Hong Kong $55,000 India $5,900 Indonesia $11,000 Laos $5,000 Macau** $88,700 Malaysia $25,000 Maldives $14,000 Mongolia $12,000 Myanmar NA Nepal $2,400 Pakistan $4,700 Singapore $82,000 Sri Lanka $10,000 Taiwan $46,000 Thailand $14,000 Timor Leste $4,900 U.S. $55,000 Vietnam $5,600 * PPP per capita USD, International Monetary Fund estimates for 2015 ** PPP per capita USD, The Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook estimates for 2013

Bangladesh 62% Bhutan 65% Brunei 96% Cambodia 77% China 96% Hong Kong** 94% India 71% Indonesia 94% Literacy* Laos 80% Macau 96% Malaysia 95% Maldives 99% Mongolia 98% Myanmar 93% Nepal 64% Pakistan 58% Singapore 97% Sri Lanka 93% Taiwan** 96% Thailand 97% Timor Leste 68% U.S.** 99% Vietnam 95% * United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) estimates for 2015 ** Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook