North Korea is so oppressive and secretive that it is almost impossible to rate. Christianity poses a serious political challenge to a regime that treats its leaders as gods incarnate. Nothing is more fearsome for Pyongyang than the claim that the leadership should be held accountable. Despite the regime’s attempt to appear open to religion, the Commission observed, “In practice, authorities target and persecute various religious groups and adherents, including Protestants, Buddhists, adherents of shamanism or traditional Korean folk religion, Chondoists, and others.”
Pakistan is an unstable, nuclear-armed, military-dominated state. Islamic fundamentalism is a powerful and deadly influence. USCIRF reported that “In 2020, religious freedom conditions in Pakistan continued to worsen. The government systematically enforced blasphemy and anti-Ahmadiyya laws and failed to protect religious minorities from abuses by nonstate actors. There was a sharp rise in targeted killings, blasphemy cases, forced conversions, and hate speech targeting religious minorities including Ahmadis, Shi’a Muslims, Hindus, Christians, and Sikhs.” The most brutal single tool of persecution may be the charge of blasphemy, which is used disproportionately and unfairly against religious minorities and routinely triggers violence against defendants and anyone who assists them.
Russia has been notable for its persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses, a small, evangelizing sect known for resisting persecution by Nazi Germany. Moreover, Ukrainian territory now occupied by separatists backed by Moscow have punished adherents to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. But depredations by this nominally Christian country run deeper and further: “The government continued to target ‘nontraditional’ religious minorities with fines, detentions, and criminal charges. Russian legislation criminalizes ‘extremism’ without adequately defining the term, enabling the state to prosecute a vast range of nonviolent religious activity.”
Saudi Arabia, in contrast to its bête noire Iran, does not allow one temple, church, or synagogue to operate. The Commission noted, “The construction of non-Muslim houses of worship and public non-Muslim prayer is forbidden. Non-Muslims are not permitted to construct houses of worship and are confined to worshipping in private settings.” Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who dramatically ramped up domestic political repression, has routinely played foreign Christians, claiming a so-far-unrequited desire to relax religious restrictions, thereby winning unearned praise from evangelicals such as Commissioner Johnnie Moore. After decades of complaints, the regime finally has improved viciously intolerant school textbooks, but the al-Sauds continue to subsidize as well as criticize rabid Wahhabi clerics in exchange for political support.
Persecution is pervasive. The new report concluded, “Throughout 2020, Saudi Arabia continued to detain and mistreat individuals who dissented from the government’s interpretation of Islam, including USCIRF Religious Prisoner of Conscience Raif Badawi, his lawyer Waleed Abu al-Khair, and atheist poet Ashraf Fayadh. Saudi Arabia also targeted dissidents online.”
Syria is a terrible tragedy, another case in which a thoughtless Western-backed campaign against a secular dictator encouraged radical Islamist attacks on religious minorities. Unsurprisingly, the Commission reported, “religious freedom in Syria remained under serious threat, particularly amid the country’s ongoing conflict and humanitarian crisis.”
Most everyone there is to blame, but Washington is supporting one of the greatest threats to religious liberty: “In beleaguered Idlib Province, radical Islamist al-Qaeda affiliate Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) — which the U.S. Department of State designated as an ‘entity of particular concern,’ or EPC, under the International Religious Freedom Act (IRFA) in December — continued to vie with other local factions … for political and military dominance over civilian areas.”
Tajikistan is majority Islamic and, more importantly, ruthlessly authoritarian. The report said, “The regime of President Emomali Rahmon maintained its authoritarian policies, suppressing displays of public religiosity by individuals of all faiths and persecuting minority communities — especially actual and alleged Salafi Muslims, a term authorities apply broadly and indiscriminately.”
Turkmenistan is another Central Asian despotism, the worst of the lot according to Freedom House, scoring just twoout of 100 on the Global Freedom Score, and oppresses free thought of all sorts, including religious faith. Indeed, USCIRF reported, “In 2020, religious freedom conditions in Turkmenistan remained among the worst in the world and showed no signs of improvement. Restrictive state policies have ‘virtually extinguished’ the free practice of religion in the country, where the government appoints Muslim clerics, surveils and dictates religious practice, and punishes nonconformity through imprisonment, torture, and administrative harassment.”
Vietnam, one of the few communist regimes left in power, moved closer to America in the decades after the end of the Vietnam War. But Hanoi’s treatment of religion has changed little. The Commission concluded,