Press Release: “Former Muslims Call on DOJ, US Commission On Civil Rights to Investigate Hate Crimes and Discrimination Against Apostates from Islam”

Press Release: “Former Muslims Call on DOJ, US Commission On Civil Rights to Investigate Hate Crimes and Discrimination Against Apostates from Islam”

11856 Balboa Boulevard, #241
Granada Hills, CA 91344
www.formermuslimsunited.org
For more information, contact Former Muslims United director Nonie Darwish
(818) 314-3972 or info@formermuslimsunited.org

MEDIA ADVISORY:
Former Muslims Call on DOJ, US Commission On Civil Rights to Investigate Hate Crimes and Discrimination Against Apostates from Islam

WASHINGTON, DC (September 21,2009) – Prominent former Muslims — apostates from Islam– will hold a press conference Thursday, September 24 to announce the launch of a new civil liberties organization, Former Muslims United, and the start of a national campaign to educate the American public and policymakers about the threat from authoritative Shariah — Islamic law– to the religious freedom and safety of former Muslims.

At the press conference,Former Muslims United founders Nonie Darwish and Ibn Warraq (both internationally-respected authors and scholars) will release letters calling on the Department of Justice and the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights to investigate possible hate crimes and civil rights violations against apostates from Islam, including the circumstances of the current Florida case of 17-year old Rifqa Bary, a former Muslim.  The letters are also signed by Former Muslims United co-founders Mohammad Asghar, Wafa Sultan and Amil Imani.

Darwish and Warraq will release the text of Former Muslim United’s groundbreaking “Muslim Pledge for Religious Freedom and Safety from Harm for Former Muslims,” copies of which will be received in the offices of dozens of Muslim leaders across America by September 25, the 220th anniversary of Congress passing the Bill of Rights.

Security at the press conference will be tightly maintained, and photo identification will be required of all attendees.
EVENT: Launch of Former Muslims United
PLACE: Longworth House Office Building,Hearing Room 1334
DATE: Thursday, September 24, 2009
TIME: 2:00 p.m.

All Former Muslims United founders are available for interviews.
For more information, contact Former Muslims United director Nonie Darwish at 818-314-3972 or email info@formermuslimsunited.org

Buffalo, New York – AP: “Psychiatric defense likely in NY wife beheading”

Buffalo, New York – AP: “Psychiatric defense likely in NY wife beheading”
— AP reports:

— “A man accused of beheading his wife at the television station they founded to counter stereotypes of Muslims is likely to claim emotional distress was behind the killing in hopes of avoiding a murder conviction.
— “Muzzammil Hassan, 45, is scheduled to be tried in January on a charge of second-degree murder in the death of 37-year-old Aasiya Hassan. A psychiatric defense would allow jurors to find him guilty of a lesser charge of manslaughter, according to Hassan’s attorney, who made his plans known during a pretrial conference Friday.”
— “‘Extreme emotional disturbance is not an insanity defense,’ attorney James Harrington said afterward. ‘It’s related to the state of mind of the person at the time.'”

U.N. General Assembly President from Libya Opposes Decriminalization of Gays “As A Muslim”

Inner City Press reports on opening of the 64th session of the United Nations General Assembly with a press conference by its new president, Ali Abdussalam Treki, a Libyan diplomat, who opposes decriminalization of homosexuality.

— Treki quoted as stating:
— “[T]hat matter is very sensitive, very touchy… As a Muslim, I am not in favor of it… it is not accepted by the majority of countries. My opinion is not in favor of this matter at all. I think it’s not really acceptable by our religion, our tradition.  It is not acceptable in the majority of the world. And there are some countries that allow that, thinking it is a kind of democracy… I think it is not”

Sydney Morning Herald report

Hindu American Foundation Human Rights Reports and Issues

Hindu American Foundation Human Rights Reports and Issues

Hindus in South Asia and the Diaspora: A Survey of Human Rights 2008
— “The Foundation’s 2008 Hindu Human Rights Report details violations against Hindus in areas where they are minority – namely in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Fiji, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka and Trinidad and Tobago, in addition to Pakistan and the Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir. The report provides detailed accounts of human rights violations are in the areas of violence against women, murder, ethnic cleansing, temple destruction, socio-political ostracization, disenfranchisement, discrimination and forced conversions.”
Download report
Press Release
— “Bangladesh and Pakistan saw the most egregious human rights abuses according to the report and garner specific censure. In Bangladesh, nearly 300 acts of murder, rape, kidnappings, temple destruction and land grabs targeting Hindus were recorded over the nine months of reporting available to the Foundation. The practice of enslaving children as bonded laborers continues unabated in Pakistan, and forced conversions and systematic persecution of Hindus has caused the continued decline of their population from 30% to around 1% over fifty years.”

Hyperlink to Hinduphobia: Online Hatred, Extremism and Bigotry Against Hindus
— “Extremist websites with hate against Hindus and Hinduism are the focus of this document in the conviction that if left unchallenged, these websites will perpetuate hatred at best, and breed violence at worst. This report provides an overview of the methods used to demean Hinduism and the individuals and organizations responsible for the content. Whether by maligning Hinduism as ‘devil-worship’ to promote a fear of Hindus and their beliefs, demeaning Hindu scriptures and deities, or falsifying Hinduism’s teachings and principles in order to claim the religious superiority of other traditions, these individuals and organizations seek to undermine tolerance and pluralism. This is the first report to systematically document hate against Hindus on the Internet, an issue of serious concern to Hindu-Americans and Hindus globally.”
Download report
— “Attacks on Hindus and their institutions are a daily reality in countries such as Bangladesh. Last year, even within the United States, a newly completed Hindu temple in Minnesota was desecrated by vandals that went on to destroy deities within the inner sanctum.  The hate sites reflected in this report inspire and justify such violence.”
— “Documenting ongoing human rights problems, the Hindu American Foundation recently released its second annual report on the status of Hindu human rights titled, ‘Hindus in South Asia and the Diaspora: A Survey of Human Rights 2005.'”
— “Atrocities committed against Hindus in various parts of the world are documented in the report. In each of the regions covered, an environment of hostility and hatred towards Hindus was created in order to enable persecution and violence to take place”

Hindus in South Asia and the Diaspora: A Survey of Human Rights 2005 Executive Summary

Pakistan – ICC report: “Pakistan Grants Bail to 13 Muslims Accused of Carnage Against Christians”

ICC reports:
“International Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that on September 7, a Pakistani court granted bail to 13 Muslims, including radical clerics who incited mob attacks against Christians, that resulted in 11 Christians being killed and over 40 Christians homes being burned down in Gojra.”
“Chief Justices Khawaja Muhammad Sharif and Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhary of the Lahore High court decided to grant the bail to the following: Bashir Ahmad Shah, Muhammad Ahmad Shah, Muhammad Abid, Kaleem Ullah, Touqir Ahmed, Muhammad Yaqoob, Sajid Farooqi, Qari Majid Farooqi, Saeed Afzal, Rizwan Akram, Amer Hayyat and Muhammad Rehman.”
“On August 1, 2009, a Muslim mob estimated at 3000 assaulted Christians in Gojra after radical Muslim clerics accused the Christians of blasphemy and called for the attacks.
For a detail story on the attacks, please go to:  http://www.persecution.org/suffering/pressdetail.php?presscode=322.
“ICC’s Jonathan Racho said, ‘We condemn in strongest terms the decision by the Lahore High Court to release the individuals responsible for the carnage in Gojra. Pakistan has repeatedly failed to bring perpetrators of violence against Christians to justice, and this latest decision helps to perpetuate a culture of impunity in Pakistan. We urge Pakistan to arrest all individuals responsible for the attacks against Christians. We also ask the government Pakistan to repeal blasphemy laws that are fueling violence against Christians.'”
“ICC urges all concerned parties to sign the petition that calls for repeal of blasphemy laws in Pakistan.”
To read and sign the petition, please go to:  http://tinypetition.com/RepealBlasphemyLaw.

Pakistan – ICC report on rape of Christian minority girl

ICC reports:
“International Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that on August 15, a Muslim man kidnapped and raped an 8th grade Christian girl in Pakistan.”
“Muhammad Akmal, accompanied by Khurshid Bibi, kidnapped Fouzia and took her to his farmhouse where he repeatedly raped her for two days. He released her only after threatening to kill her if she told anyone that she had been kidnapped and raped.”
“Salam Masih, Fouzia’s brother, told ICC that they reported the incident to the local police, but the police have not yet apprehended Muhammad, who is an influential landlord in the district of Toba Tek Singh.”
“Rana Ahmed Hassan, a police officer from the district, told ICC that Muhammed had fled from the village, but the police were doing their best to apprehend him.”
“Christian minorities in Pakistan are easy targets for harassment and attacks due to discriminatory laws that relegate them to the level of second-class citizens. In the past two months alone, 12 Christians were murdered by Muslims. The government of Pakistan has repeatedly failed to protect Christians from attacks and violence.”

Why Women’s Human Rights Issues Require Serious Responses

As Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has been stating since our first public event on International Women’s Day, the continuing threats of misogyny, oppression, violence, and murder against women in the world is a serious human right’s issue.  Any issue that impacts and threatens women, who represent half of humanity, must require our urgent attention.

We promote the defense of women’s human rights from all of the attacks against them:  the misogynist hate crimes against women in America and around the world with atrocities such as in the Congo, the need for full Constitutional rights of women in America, and the atrocities of oppression, violence, and murder of women rationalized by some in the world based what we have called “extremism.”

On the last of these, we have seen a continuing inconsistency and lack of seriousness about addressing the ideological basis that is used to rationalize such misogynist hate, violence, and murder.  We have seen groups that oppose the idea of “stoning” in Iran and Saudi Arabia, but not the ideology that rationalizes such misogynist hate.  We have seen groups that oppose so-called “honor killings” of Muslim women, but won’t challenge the ideology that rationalizes such murders.  We have seen groups that claim they are for human rights, but carefully ignore abuses where non-Muslim and other minority Muslim women are oppressed, abused and murdered by those who rationalize their actions based on ideology of extremism in its various sects and permutations.

This lack of seriousness in addressing this life and death women’s human rights issues remains an ethical challenge for our generation.  We cannot let this continue.  Yet we see this lack of seriousness on such mortal women’s human rights issues bandied about recklessly by academia, human rights groups, and politicians.  Surely it time we challenge those who do not take the daily ideological threat to women’s lives and freedom seriously.

At a recent conference on peace issues, where an academic scholar was discussing the idea of improving the role of women to further peace in “fundamentalist Islamic” nations, I asked how we could improve this role without any challenge to the ideology behind the oppression of such women.  The answer that came back was that this would all take time, perhaps 100 years or more.   Of course, none of us will be around to argue whether the scholar is correct in such a protracted approach…  nor will all of the women whose lives were lost over the time period because we were unwilling to challenge the misogyny of an extremist ideology.  But what was truly disturbing was how it appeared that I was the only one in an audience of hundreds who seemed to view this scholar’s apparent willingness to accept such femicide over the next century (at least) as an outrageous abandonment of women’s rights.  Accepting an endless femicide of Muslim and non-Muslim women because we fear challenging an ideology of supremacism is not a serious nor an acceptable human rights solution.

Moreover, such inconsistency is not limited to academia, but extends to well-known, international human rights groups themselves.   At the end of July, I attended a seminar on Capitol Hill on “How Empowering Saudi Women Can Undermine Extremism.”  At the seminar, Human Rights Watch provided us with copies of their analysis of the Saudi Male Guardianship program.   This report disturbingly included references and quotes from ISNA President Ingrid Mattson, who has defended the idea of an extremist caliphate, and who has unquestioningly claimed that “legal rights of women were enshrined in Islamic law,” when we can see around the world on a daily basis that extremists use Sharia law as a justification to deny Muslim women such rights.

I asked conference speaker Human Rights Watch’s Sarah Leah Whitson (Executive Director for the Middle East and North Africa Division of Human Rights Watch) if there were measures that the United States government could take to help protect Saudi women by offering asylum measures similar to what the United Kingdom started doing.   Ms. Whitson’s reply was that essentially it is none of America’s business, and that what Americans should really be concerned about is pressuring Israel.  I looked around wondering, if somehow I had wandered into the wrong conference.  No, this was indeed the “How Empowering Saudi Women Can Undermine Extremism” conference.  But when I questioned the HRW speaker again on how we could actually help Saudi women through American influence, I was told that we should focus on Israel, and be more concerned about other asylum cases.  Moreover, I was told that the U.S. had no influence with Saudi Arabia (when did we stop subsidizing Saudi Arabia’s oil industry?).  It was no surprise to learn that HRW has been seeking funding from Saudis.

Finally, we see such inconsistency from politicians which is predictable, since their business is focused on whatever combination of popularity stunts, political outrage, and compromise will continue to keep them in office.  However, since these politicians end up as our government representatives and leaders, we also need to hold them accountable for a more serious handling of such women’s human rights issues.

As I have previously written, there has been a consistent and conscious denial of the extremist threat to women from U.S. government officials in virtually every branch of government.  Such utter abandonment of such a vital and serious human rights issue threatening half of the world’s population, and increasingly American women, is ethically unacceptable.  Yet such abandonment will continue as long as those who seek to challenge this extremist threat to women choose a political, rather than a human rights approach to addressing this issue.  Those who seek a political approach of division and partisanship on such topics will inevitably prevent us from reaching the consensus of Americans that do believe in such women’s human rights issues.  Reaching such a consensus on these human rights issues is a core mission goal of the Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) group.  We see how American government leaders today continue to ignore such vital women’s rights issues.  Regarding the nations of Afghanistan and Pakistan, the American government’s recent list of objectives and metrics fails to make such human rights our top priority.  But we will have no effective security policy and no effective counterterrorism policy without prioritizing human rights first.  Not only does our Afghanistan and Pakistan policy not prioritize women’s human rights, it does not prioritize human rights period.  We cannot afford to continue such government actions that are unwilling to be serious about these issues.

Denial is not the only form of such political neglect of women’s human rights. Not being serious about such women’s rights issues can also be seen in the nonsensical political outrage demonstrated in the Netherlands this week.  If you are concerned about the global challenge of extremists’ threats to women, but you are not embarrassed by the outrageous call by Geert Wilders to tax Muslim women’s headscarves in the Netherlands, you should be asking yourself why.

Radio Netherlands reported on Mr.Wilder’s proposal:  “Any Muslim woman who wants to wear a headscarf – which he described as a ‘head-rag’ – would have to apply for a license, and pay one thousand euros for the privilege… He would not tax the Christian form of the headscarf, but he did not say how policy would make that distinction.”  Mr. Wilders has also called for banning the Qur’an and stopping the building of new mosques.  Political outrage may be good for Mr. Wilder’s political campaigns, but such outrage, anti-freedom platforms, and such recent nonsensical suggestions — all detract from the public understanding of the very serious mortal threat against the world’s women today.

If we seek to improve the condition of Muslim and non-Muslim women threatened by extremist misogyny, oppression, violence, and murder, we need human rights representatives that are dependent on facts, not theatrics, and that are focused on inclusion, not division.  Accepting academic tolerance of the ongoing suffering of women, accepting human rights groups’ refusal to acknowledge an ideological threat behind such misogyny, and accepting political polarities of total denial and absurd division — are all unacceptable options for our generation.

The world’s women deserve better than this.

Iraq: “How Islamist gangs use internet to track, torture and kill Iraqi gays”

Guardian: “How Islamist gangs use internet to track, torture and kill Iraqi gays”

Guardian reports:
— “Iraqi militias infiltrate internet gay chatrooms to hunt their quarry – and hundreds are feared to be victims”

Related Reports:

Iraq: “Honor Killings” and Attacks on Gays Continue to Rise


Iraq: LGBT group claims Iraq is waging a ‘campaign of violence and murder’ against gays


Iraq: “a program of ‘sexual cleansing’ is being perpetrated against homosexuals in Iraq”

Iraq: Radical Iraq cleric orders ‘depraved homosexuality to be eradicated