WASHINGTON: The US government commission on religious freedom on Friday urged action against ally
The US Commission on International Religious Freedom, whose members are appointed by the president and lawmakers across party lines but whose role is advisory, said the State Department “must stop giving a free pass” to Saudi Arabia.
The State Department, in a congressionally mandated annual report, classifies Saudi Arabia among its “countries of particular concern” for violations of religious freedom, which would normally require the United States to take punitive actions such as imposing economic sanctions.
But successive secretaries of state have each year issued waivers on punishing Saudi Arabia, citing national security interests.
“The Saudi government’s execution of minority Shia Muslims on the basis of their religious identity and peaceful activism is not only shocking, but also directly contradicts the government’s official narrative of working toward greater modernization and improving religious freedom conditions,” the commission’s chair, Tenzin Dorjee, said in a statement as the commission urged an end to the waivers.
Saudi Arabia practices a puritanical Wahabi ideology, with the latest State Department report on religious freedom pointing to a “pattern of societal prejudice and discrimination” against the Shia minority and a ban on the practice of any faith besides Islam.
The UN human rights chief said that at least three were minors when charged.
President
Trump has not commented on the executions, although the State Department said it urged “Saudi Arabia and all governments” to respect freedom of religion.
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