Wednesday, August 5, 2015
UAE makes ‘offending God’ illegal
They can arrest you for NOT believing in IMAGINARY FRIENDS IN THE SKY!!
Posted: Wed, 05 Aug 2015 12:02
The United Arab Emirates has passed an 'anti-hatred' law
which it has claimed will help tackle discrimination, but which outlaws
'insulting' religion.
The Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, reportedly
said that the decree "guarantees the freedom of individuals from
religious intolerance." He claimed that the new law was 'inclusive'.
However Gulf News
reports that the legislation makes illegal "any acts that stoke
religious hatred" and "any form of expression" that insults religion.
The
law, passed by decree at the end of July, "prohibits any act that would
be considered as insulting God, His prophets or apostles or holy books
or houses of worship or graveyards."
The legislation
purports to allow for an "environment of tolerance" and
"broad-mindedness", but includes potential 10 year jail terms and
substantial fines for those who break the law.
Provisions in the legislation include a prohibition on expressing doubt about the existence of God.
NSS
president Terry Sanderson commented: "The UAE are using
anti-discrimination legislation as a cover to criminalise all manner of
dissent- including blasphemy. It is dispiriting, and sadly unsurprising
to see yet another crackdown on religious freedom and freedom of speech
in the Islamic world.
"As with the recent comments from the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Islamic Affairs,
the language of human rights, freedom and tolerance are subverted in
order to further an Islamist agenda, in this case under the guise of an
anti-discrimination statute. In fact, this legislation insults the
concept of equality by creating discrimination against non-believers."
While
the law does make it illegal to discriminate on the basis of ethnicity
or religion, and on some other characteristics, it undermines these
provisions by criminalising the expression of atheism and with its
severe restrictions on free speech.
There have also
been concerns that the anti-discrimination provisions of the legislation
make no reference to sexual orientation, and therefore offer no
protection to victims of discrimination on the basis of their sexuality.
Mr
Sanderson added: "It's important that attention is drawn to laws like
these, particularly given that so many Islamist regimes are intent on
enacting global laws against the 'defamation of religion'.
"These attempts often cynically hijack the vocabulary of human rights, something which we also see from many groups and activists in the West who lobby for de facto blasphemy legislation."
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