Law and Religion Headlines


Friday, 5 October 2012

Temple Mount briefly closed, nine arrested
(Melanie Lidman, Jerusalem Post)

Thousands join Islamic Jihad rally in Gaza
(Ma'an News Agency)

U.N., the debate on the recognition of Palestine as a state scheduled for mid-November
(AsiaNews.it)

UN Human Rights Council attempts to create global abortion right
(Susan Yoshihara, LifeNews.com)

Uzbekistan: "Illegal extremists" or peaceful Muslims?
(Mushfig Bayram, Forum 18 News Service)

When the UN breach human rights… who wins?
(Alasdair Henderson, UK Human Rights Blog)

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Amendment 8 pits religious groups against backers of church-state separation
(Leslie Postal, Orlando Sentinel)

Archbishop Lori discusses presidential debates, polls and the beatitudes
(Joan Frawley Desmond, National Catholic Register)

Atheists ask military to drop 'religious expressions' in suicide prevention briefings
(Alex Murashko, The Christian Post)

Being a religious minority (in public schools)
(Jason Pitzl-Waters, Patheos Blog - The Wild Hunt: A Modern Pagan Perspective)

Brussels: between Athens and Jerusalem
(Piotr Mazurkiewicz, COMECE, EuropeInfos)

Buenos Aires mayor urged to veto abortion law
(Myles Collier, Christian Post)

California governor signs LGBT bills for fertility treatment, foster parents, ex-gay therapy
(Zack Ford, ThinkProgress LGBT)

Cardinal Martini: The challenge of witness to Europe
(Compiled by Johanna Touzel, EuropeInfos)

Citizens jailed for religious speech on Boubon Street
(Charlie Butts, OneNewsNow)

Contraception and religious liberty
(Editorial, New York Times)

Crucial marriage cases coming up for high court consideration
(Alan Sears, Alliance Defending Freedom)

Egypt's Copts abandon Sinai homes after threats, attack
(Yousri Mohamed and Tamim Elyan, Reuters)

European Parliament seminar: Christians and freedom of religion in Europe
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

Homeless group shuts door on Jehovah’s Witness, lawsuit claims
(Irving DeJohn, New York Daily News)

Kountze cheerleaders present case at hearing to determine fate of student-made religious banners
(Liberty Institute, Sacramento Bee)

Pakistan: A call for interfaith harmony
(Rehan Nawaz, Pakistan Today)

Pew Forum Weekly Religion News Update

Police ban gay pride march in Serbia that Christian Orthodox church opposed
(Washington Post)

Reinforcing religious freedom through asylum
(José Luis Bazán, COMECE, EuropeInfos)

Report: Freedom to marry and freedom to worship are compatible
(Elena Caple, ThinkProgress LGBT)

There's still Christianity in the public schools?
(Jan Jaben-Eilon, Jews On First!)

Tunisia: Fears grow over Tunisian salafist violence
(Monia Ghanmi, Magharebia)

U.S. State Department discriminates against Indiana pastor on basis of collar
(Liberty Institute, Sacramento Bee)

Welcoming the more vulnerable: do parents have a right to selection of a healthy child?
(José Ramos-Ascensão, COMECE, EuropeInfos)

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Anti-Semitic attacks on the rise in Berlin
(The Globe and Mail)

Armenian Christians torn in Syria’s civil war
(Martin Armstrong, Lauren Williams, The Daily Star (Lebanon))

Australia: Evangelist preaching ban heads to High Court
(Mike Sexton, ABC News)

Blog: Muslim ideology and Western freedom of speech
(John McLaughlin, American Thinker)

Bulgaria: Legal proceedings against 13 Muslim clerics
(Grand Mufti's Office in the Republic of Bulgaria, Human Rights Without Frontiers)

Data on hate crime in focus at annual OSCE human rights meeting
( OSCE / ODIHR)

Dhaka blames recent Facebook riots on Rohingya
(Sanjiv Burman, Deutsche Welle)

District court dismisses lawsuit challenging 'Year of the Bible'
(Amy Worden, Inquirer Harrisburg Bureau)

Egypt's constitution Party seeks prosecution for 'infidel' fatwa by Islamist sheikhs
(Ahram Online)

Egyptian boys detained for alleged Quran defiling
(Sarah El Deeb, Associated Press, ABC News)

End to Philippine Muslim insurgency near
(The Australian)

Gov. Brown signs bill to protect religious freedom in marriage solemnization
(LGBT Weekly)

Hardline Israeli settlers deface Monastery of Saint Francis in Jerusalem
(Ori Lewis, Reuters)

Hate speech, Islam and Israel
(David Moshman, Huff Post Politics)

In Assisi, seeking love and forgiveness in the shadow of St. Francis
(Charles Honey, Washington Post)

Islamists in Mali recruit, pay for child soldiers
(Krista Larson and Baba Ahmed, Associated Press)

Kantor urges Europeans to enter into dialogue over "assault on religion"
(World Jewish Congress)

New center to expand reach of Baptist Joint Committee
(Robert Dilday, ABP News)

Nigeria resumes hajj trips to Mecca, ending row over unaccompanied women
(Reuters)

No Arab Spring without the 'flower’ of women’s rights
(Barbara Slavin, AL Monitor)

Obama administration: Bible publisher isn’t religious enough for exemption
(Alliance Defending Freedom)

Obama enacts visa program for religious workers
(JTA)

OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting concluding in Warsaw
(OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights)

Philippines defies church to push family planning
(Karen Lema, Reuters)

Plenary Assembly of European Episcopal Conferences concludes in Switzerland
(Junno Arocho, Zenit)

Religious sensitivities no excuse for violence - OpEd
(The Globe and Mail)

Russia: No more mosques outside "Muslim areas"?
(Geraldine Fagan, Forum 18 News Service)

Saudi religious police losing some powers
(Associated Press)

Saudi religious police losing some powers
(Associated Press, Yahoo! News)

Seminar discusses discrimination against Christians in EU
(COMECE, Independent Catholic News)

Shiite Muslims quietly establish a foothold in U.S.
(Omar Sacirbey | Religion News Service, The Washington Post)

Supreme Court justices attend annual Red Mass
(Stacy A. Anderson, Associated Press via Huffington Post)

Supreme Court to consider hearing weighty church-state controversy
(The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty)

The globalisation of free speech: a race to the top or the bottom?
(Sarah Joseph, On Line Opinion (Australia))

Toledo mosque fire ruled arson
(Taylor Dungjen, Toledo Blade)

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

27 students killed in northeast Nigeria
(Haruna Umar/Yinka Ibukun, Associated Press, ABC News)

A step backward for Indonesian diplomacy
(TEMPO Interactive, Jakarta)

Aggressive decision against religious liberty
(Ed Whelan, National Review Online)

Anti-Obama protesters arrested for praying
(Cliff Kincaid, Canada Free Press)

Cardinal George speaks about religious liberty
(Pam DeFiglio, Skokie Patch)

Chancel repair liability: advice from the Charity Commission
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

Christians in Europe face 'persecution'
(Martin Banks, The Parliament.com)

Esbeck on law and religion after the Founding
(Dan Ernst, Legal History Blog)

Explainer: Pakistan's blasphemy laws
(Reza Sayah, CNN Belief Blog)

Human rights as a way of life
(Shulamith Koenig, Un Chronicle)

Inciting hate under the banner of human rights
(Salma Yusuf, Eurasia Review)

Individual, community, and state: How to think about religious freedom
(Matthew J. Franck, Imprimis (Hillsdale College))

Liberty Counsel to file suit against California's ban on sexual orientation change therapy
(Liberty Counsel, Catholic Online)

New Egyptian constitution offers fewer religious freedoms, critics allege
(Osman El Sharnoubi, Ahram Online)

Nineteenth Annual International Law and Religion Symposium - 7-9 October 2012
(International Center for Law & Religion Studies)

Petition against religious intolerance
(Justice (R) Fakhr-un-Nisa Khokhar, The International News (Pakistan))

Preaching Politics from the Pulpit: 2012 Guide to IRS Rules on Political Activity by Religious Organizations
(The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life)

Reminder: National Millennial Values Survey Release, 4 October 2012
(The Berkley Center and the Public Religion Research Institute)

Setback for Pakistani teen facing blasphemy charges
(Reza Sayah and Nasir Habib, CNN Belief Blog)

Tanzania: Hamad cautions over religious intolerance
(Tanzania Daily News (Dar es Salaam), All Africa)

Turkmenistan: Mass fines for unregistered religious worship
(Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service)

Monday, 1 October 2012

Abu Hamza, teachers’ anonymity and Chagos refugees – The Human Rights Roundup
(Wessen Jazrawi, UK Human Rights Blog)

Algeria at UN: Limit free speech, protect Islam
(David Stringer, Associated Press)

Americans United mass mailing urges churches to reject religious right electioneering entreaties and obey federal tax law
(Simon Brown, Americans United)

Bangladesh vows to protect Buddhists after attacks
(Tofayel Ahmed and Julhas Alam, Associated Press)

Calif. first to ban gay teen 'conversion' therapy
(Associated Press)

Council of Europe and the protests in the Islamic world against the film “The innocence of Muslims”
(Secretary General, Council of Europe)

Court rejects religious freedom objection to contraception mandate
(Don Byrd, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Freedom)

Egypt: The religious implications of IMF loans
(David Bosco, Bosco Foreign Policy)

Event – Constitutional Challenges: Religious Liberty and the HHS Mandate
(Columbus School of Law, The Catholic University of America ( 3 October, 4 pm))

Fla. 'Religious Freedom' amendment reignites school voucher debate
(Rob Shaw, The Tampa Tribune)

France set to ban the words 'mother' and 'father' from official documents
(The Telegraph)

Germany resumes ritual circumcisions after bitter dispute
(Alexandra Hudson, Reuters)

Green light for prayer calls at Swedish mosque
(The Local)

Human rights in focus at U.S. Supreme Court
(Jonathan Stempel, Reuters)

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