For the past year, Open Doors, a U.S.-based human rights organisation
has been compiling the “World Watch List” which maps the religious
freedom situation around the world.
According to the data collected for
the 2013 list, as many as eight out of ten States that have adopted
repressive measures against Christians are Islamic.
At the dawn of the
third millennium, therefore, state Islam presents itself as an element
of deep and continuous repression of religious freedom.
According to Ron Boyd MacMillan who works in the “strategy” section
of Open Doors, Islamic religious extremism is the number one cause of
Christian persecution around the world; this includes Islam at
government level and the Islam represented by the opposition.
Contrary to the forecasts made during the early months, two years
since it exploded onto the world scene, the Arab Spring has revealed
itself to be a key cause of the worsening of Christian life not just in
the Middle East but also in the Asia-Pacific region. This is hugely
ironic considering the expectations that were triggered by the Arab
Spring and how warmly it was welcomed by Western mass media.
"The Arab Spring has turned into an Islamic Winter for the Christians
in the Middle East," Boyd-MacMillan said. "In every country where a
regime has been deposed - such as Tunisia, Libya, Morocco and Egypt -
Islam is still in power and putting pressure on the Christian minority."
The Open Doors list, classifies Saudi Arabia among the top persecutor
countries, second only to North Korea which worships the ruling Kim
family almost religiously. Open Doors estimates that there are somewhere
between 50 to 70 thousand Christians in North Korean forced labour
camps out of a total of 400 thousand workers.
The Open Doors List (which was first published in 1991) takes into
account the various degrees of repression citizens are subjected to:
private life, family life, religious community life and national life.
The U.S. Department of State also compiles a list of countries that
commit the most serious violations of religious freedom. Its list of
“Countries of Particular Concern” includes Myanmar, China, Eritrea,
Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan.
But the Islamic violence witnessed in recent months has certainly
changed the map a bit. One need only think of Syria, where the “jihad”
financed by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, has led to the birth of the “Islamic
Caliphate of Aleppo” a city famous for its multiculturalism.
Then there
is Mali.
This African State used to be a shining example of peaceful
co-existence but after its temporary conquest by Islamic fundamentalists
and the imposition of Sharia law, thousands of Christians were forced
to leave.