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Defending Obscurantism

Saudi call for worldwide laws against blasphemy

In an Orwellian twist of logic, Gulf states are once again pushing to restrict religious freedom under the guise of promoting tolerance, combating extremism and protecting human rights.

At a conference in France at the weekend, a Saudi official from the Ministry of Islamic Affairs called for the worldwide introduction of blasphemy laws, as a matter of urgency.

The situation, he said, “requires everyone to intensify efforts to criminalize insulting heavenly religions, prophets, holy books, religious symbols and places of worship”.

The kingdom, of course, has been setting an example in this respect. It was under such laws that Saudi blogger Raif Badawi was sentenced to 1,000 lashes, 10 years in jail sentence and fined one million riyals ($266,000).

Earlier this month, Iceland became the latest country to legalize blasphemy. A parliamentary bill repealing the 75-year-old law stated: “It is fundamental to a free society that people should be able to express themselves without fear of punishment, whether from the authorities or from other people.”

Emirati crackdown

Last week the UAE’s president, Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, issued an ill-conceived decree which was reported as cracking down on “hate speech”. It received praise from local media and “experts.”

It did indeed criminalize “any acts that stoke religious hatred” and outlawed takfirism – characterizing “religious groups or individuals as infidels, or unbelievers” – but it also included vaguely worded provisions that would allow the authorities to suppress any religious (or irreligious) discourse that they happen to disapprove of.

According to Gulf News, the decree criminalizes “any act that insults religion through any form of expression, be it speech or the written word, books, pamphlets or online” along with “any act that would be considered as insulting God, His prophets or apostles or holy books or houses of worship or graveyards.”

A further provision makes it illegal to “discriminate against individuals or groups on the basis of religion, caste, doctrine, race, color or ethnic origin.” While that might sound commendable, the UAE has numerous laws which discriminate on the basis of religion and there is no sign of any move to abolish them: