Yesterday the United Nations General Assembly's Third Committee (which focuses on social humanitarian and cultural issues) adopted a controversial resolution urging countries to combat the defamation of religion. Canwest News Service reports that the resolution passed 85-50, with 42 abstentions. The 6-page Resolution (full text in Word doc.) includes a call for "all States to provide, within their respective legal and constitutional systems, adequate protection against acts of hatred, discrimination, intimidation and coercion resulting from defamation of religions and incitement to religious hatred in general...." Similar resolutions have been put forward in other U.N. venues as part of a campaign by the Organization of the Islamic Conference. (See prior posting.) Canwest says that "While this year's draft is less Islam-centric that resolutions of earlier years, analysts note it is more emphatic in linking religion defamation and incitement to violence."
The American Jewish Committee, in a release yesterday, said that the resolution, sponsored by Belarus, Uganda, and Venezuela, "stifles valid scrutiny of radical Islam and condones intimidation as a response to insensitive speech." Scoop News says that this year's vote in favor of the resolution reflected a decline in support, stemming from efforts by groups such as the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty and UN Watch to muster opposition the measure.