Law and Religion Headlines
Friday, 6 June 2014
Alleged Hindu fringe group members arrested for murder of Muslim
(Shanoor Seervai, The Wall Street Journal)
Gunmen posing as preachers kill dozens in northeast Nigeria – police
(Lanre Ola, Reuters)
Tiananmen massacre still spurring church growth
(CBN News)
Pope seeks to rekindle dream of Mideast peace
(Associated Press, The Washington Post)
Kyrgystan: Complaining to local authorities about burial violations is "useless"
(Mushfig Bayram, Forum 18)
Christians, Muslims and Hindus express solidarity with victims of Bangladesh's Baniarchar church attack
(World Council of Churches)
Racism in the name of anti-racism
(David Bernstein, The Volokh Conspiracy)
Thursday, 5 June 2014
Central African Republic: Let Muslims seek safety, urges HRW
(Eurasia Review)
Turkey’s intra-Islamic witch hunt
(Mustafa Akyol, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
Israeli army tries to lure Arab Christian recruits
(Botrus Mansour, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
Allegations of racism surface in Israel’s ultra-Orthodox schools
(Daniel Ben Simon, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
China sentences 81 in Xinjiang for terrorism
(Al Jazeera America)
North Korean Christians embrace suffering and don't feel country is worst place to be a Christian, ministry argues
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)
Syria's Assad sweeps 'non-election' US says changes nothing
(AFP, Ahram Online)
No solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will tear down the region’s gender walls
(Brian Pellot, Religion News Service)
Election of Ahmed Maiteeq as new Libyan PM violating law: Court official
(AFP, Ahram Online)
Israel miffed U.S. still funding PLO, 'unity' gov't
(Chad Groening, One News Now)
Hundreds feared dead in 'massive' Boko Haram village raids
(AFP, Ahram Online)
Meriam Ibrahim's brother says she should be executed for apostasy
(Brownie Marie, Christian Today)
Indian priest kidnapped in Afghanistan
(Anto Akkara, World Watch Monitor)
Sudan's Christians 'don't feel safe in prayer' after mother's death sentence for apostasy
(Katherine Weber, The Christian Post)
'Unique' religious freedom restrictions in Saudi Arabia: not a single church exists, entire country is 'sacred mosque,' watchdog reveals
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)
Afghans say 3 Taliban arrested in Jesuit kidnap
(Amir Shah and Nirmala George, The Associated Press, The Big Story)
Witnesses: Boko Haram militants slaughter hundreds
(Haruna Umar, The Associated Press, The Big Story)
Taliban after Afghan elections: Spring offensive or the last stand?
(D Suba Chandran, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies)
Rouhani accused of trying to separate religion, administration
(Arash Karami, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
Faisalabad: Church and civil society groups stage protest for minority quota
(Shafique Khokhar, AsiaNews.it)
Burmese Buddhists against Qatar mobile phone company: "Boycott Muslims"
(AsiaNews.it)
Christians object to serving in Israel's army
(Jonathan Cook, Al Jazeera America)
Wednesday, 4 June 2014
Bhutan: An update on recent developments
(Dr. S. Chandrasekharan, South Asia Analysis Group)
Hate religion but love Buddhism?
(Joanna Piacenza, First Things)
God & GOP * Pope on Piety * Freud & Faith: Wednesday’s Roundup
(David Gibson, Religion News Service)
Yemeni air force bombs Houthi fighters in Amran
(Al Bawaba News)
Saudi anti-terrorism law casts wide net
(Abdulmajeed al-Buluwi, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
Turkey unblocks YouTube
(Arab News)
Brazil: Religious intolerance on the rise
(Simone Marques, Index on Censorship)
Sudan woman’s apostasy death sentence ‘depends on appeal’
(Arab News)
Meriam Ibrahim has not recanted Christian faith, says lawyer
(Cath Martin, Christian Today)
After 25 years, Beijing is wasting time trying to erase Tiananmen
(Bernardo Cervellera, AsiaNews.it)
Islamist organization activists convicted in Tajikistan
(Interfax-Religion)
Remembering Tienanmen Square
(Faith McDonnell, Juicy Ecumenism)
In defense of familyism
(John Zmirak, Aleteia)
Nigerian villagers 'killed in Boko Haram church attack'
(BBC News Africa)
Tuesday, 3 June 2014
'Bad veiling' a protest against government, says Iran cleric
(Arash Karami, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
As Presbyterians again weigh divestment, Jewish groups lobby, warn and worry
(Ron Kampeas, JTA)
Egyptian satirist Youssef ends show
(Arab News)
How Hitler and Judas could end up in heaven
(Damon Linker, The Week)
Islamist militia helps new Libyan PM seize office
(Esam Mohamed, Arab News)
Nigeria tops Christian persecution violence list, according to Open Doors, report
(Eurasia Review)
Religious groups and scholars of Islam in Syrian revolution
(Issam Eido, Syria Comment)
Sabha reporter's throat slit
(Asma Elourfi, Magharebia)
The Audacity of Pope: The ‘Francis Doctrine’ puts the Vatican back on the world stage
(David Gibson, Religion News Service)
Religion and Law in the United Kingdom - Second Edition
(Mark Hill QC, Russell Sandberg, Norman Doe, Kluwer Law International)
Christian publisher unveils 'Modern English Version' of the Bible
(Michael Gryboski, The Christian Post Church & Ministry)
Livni officiates same-sex wedding
(Lahav Harkov, The Jerusalem Post)
Catholic and libertarian? Pope’s top adviser says they’re incompatible
(David Gibson, Religion News Service)
Cambodia welcomes return of 1,000-year-old statues
(Sopheng Cheang, The Associated Press, The Big Story)
Jesuit director kidnapped in Afghanistan
(Amir Shah, The Times and Democrat)
5 controversies that still plague the (Christian) church
(Bonnie Kristian, Relevant Magazine)
Open Doors releases top 10 list of countries where Christians face most violent attacks
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)
"Muslim Gospel" revealing the "Christian Truth" excites the Da Vinci code set
(Annette Yoshiko Reed, Religious Dispatches: (A)theologies)
Over 60 churches destroyed in Syria, thousands of Christians become refugees - Russian MP
(Interfax-Religion)
In first, Mexico's Catholic Church accuses priest of child sex crime
(Lizbeth Diaz, Reuters)
Fearing converts to terrorism, France intercepts citizens bound for Syria
(Alissa J. Rubin, The New York Times)
Vatican: Too early to confirm 2025 Orthodox-Catholic summit
(Josephine McKenna, Religion News Service)
Azerbaijan: A leading nation advocating peace and humanitarianism - OpEd
(Peter Tase, Eurasia Review)
Thai coup leaders warn against making 'Hunger Games' sign
(Voice of America)
Pope Francis tells couples not to substitute dogs and cats for children
(Josephine McKenna, Religion News Service)
West Java authorities yield to Islamic pressure and close down seven Protestant churches
(Mathias Hariyadi, AsiaNews.it)
Tiananmen psychosis: Even Bao Tong, who wanted to stop the massacre, is arrested
(AsiaNews.it)
The story of Anni Zhang, China's youngest prisoner of conscience
(AsiaNews.it)
Egyptian satirist Youssef ends TV show
(Evan Hill, Al Jazeera America)
Nigerian police ban protests over abducted schoolgirls
(AFP, France 24 International News)
EVENT, 3-5 June 2014: Religions and Constitutional Transitions in the Muslim Mediterranean: "The Pluralistic Moment"
(Università degli Studi dell'Insubria, Como, Italy, The International Center for Religion, Law and Economy in the Mediterranean Area and the International Center for Law and Religion Studies)
Muslims in Malegaon burn effigy of Najma…
(Indian Christian Activist Network)
Monday, 2 June 2014
'Millions denied end-of-life drugs'
(Tulip Mazumdar, BBC News Health)
Gay cakes * Zombie guru * Camp Kill Jews: May’s Religious Freedom Recap
(Brian Pellot, RNS Blog: On Freedom)
Reuven Rivlin, Israeli presidential front-runner, champions pluralism in politics but not Judaism
(Ben Sales, JTA)
Laws forbidding conversion and inter-faith marriage shake Mynamar
(Lizabeth Paulat, Care2)
Rafiq Hayat: Religious extremists 'devoid of faith'
(PR Newswire)
Is Ndanga persecuting Christian churches in Zimbabwe?
(Etiwel Mutero, Bulawayo 24)
Indonesia: SBY condemns attack on Catholics
(Jakarta Post)
Boko Haram is not an Islamist group
(Al-Hakim Andanu, Nigerian Tribune - Letters)
Clerics seek to whip Iranians into religious shape
(Camelia Entekhabi-Fard, Al Arabiya News)
Israel learns the Palestinian narrative
(Akiva Eldar, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)
Israel to mandate teaching evolution in middle schools
(Al Jazeera America)
Religion and psychiatry: Mixing soul medicines
(H.G. and B.C., The Economist [Erasmus: Religion and Public Policy])
Religious freedom linked to economic growth, finds global study
(Brian J. Grim, the Weekly Number)
Is Religious Freedom Good for Business?: A Conceptual and Empirical Analysis
(Brian J. Grim (Georgetown University), Greg Clark (Brigham Young University), and Robert Edward Snyder (Brigham Young University), Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion (Baylor University))
Sudanese Muslims risking their lives for a Christian woman sentenced to death
(Tina Ramirez, Hardwired)
Sudan retracts claim that Meriam Ibrahim will be freed
(Agence France-Presse, The Guardian)
Meriam Ibrahim death sentence draws formal complaint against Sudan
(Harriet Sherwood, The Guardian)
Lawyer: 'absurd' that Christian Sudanese mother will be freed in days; family has no idea
(Leonardo Blair, The Christian Post)
Syrians working to preserve Jewish cultural heritage - OpEd
(Franklin Lamb, Eurasia Review)
The appalling apartheid state of the Rohingyas must end - OpEd
(Dr. Habib Siddiqui, Eurasia Review)
The choices ahead for Afghans - OpEd
(Aziz Amin Ahmadzai, Eurasia Review)
Tajikistan: 'Insult' ruling against news outlet
(Eurasia Review)
Yogyakarta, another attack on Sleman’s Christains
(Mathias Hariyadi, AsiaNews.it)
Italian priests, Canadian nun freed in Cameroon months after kidnapping
(Katherine Weber, The Christian Post)
Three kidnapped missionaries are freed in Cameroon
(Adam Nossiter, The New York Times)
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