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India has highest level of social hostility involving religion: Pew Research

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By Sujeet RajanNEW YORK: India has the highest level of social hostilities involving religion, according to the Pew Research Center’s latest annual study on global restrictions on religion.

The new study released today finds that the share of countries with high or very high levels of social hostilities involving religion dropped from 33% in 2012 to 27% in 2013, the most recent year for which data are available. These types of hostilities run the gamut from vandalism of religious property and desecration of sacred texts to violent assaults resulting in deaths and injuries.Interestingly, Pew’s index for social hostility has India tied as the worst in the world along with Israel, with the latter on top of the list which is termed as ‘Very High’. It’s followed by Palestinian Territories

, Pakistan (which shows that hostility actually decreasded), and Nigeria. Bangladesh (where hostility has increased), Sri Lanka, Syria, Somalia, Afghanistan, Tanzania, Indonesia, Egypt, Central African Republic, Iraq and Kenya rounded out the other countries on the list of ‘Very High’ social hostility in the world.The United States is listed in the Moderate category for social hostility, though the index show that’s it’s gone up, as of 2013.St. Lucia, Cuba, Botswana, Portugal and Guinea Bissau are the last five countries listed in the ‘Low’ category, which could also mean that that they almost no incidents of social hostility at all.Worldwide, social hostilities involving religion declined somewhat in 2013 after reaching a six-year peak the previous year, but roughly a quarter of the world’s countries are still grappling with high levels of religious hostilities within their borders.

The report points out that more than three-quarters of the world’s people – 77% – live in nations where religious restrictions of some kind (related to either government or social groups) are either high or very high. This reflects the fact that some of the countries with high restrictions on religion are among the world’s most populous. Notably, China has very high government restrictions on religion, and India saw a very high level of social hostilities involving religion within its borders in 2013. Both countries are home to more than a billion people.Among the world’s 25 most populous countries,

the highest overall levels of restrictions were found in Burma (Myanmar), Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan and Russia, where both the government and society at large impose numerous limits on religious beliefs and practices.By contrast, the share of countries with high or very high government restrictions on religion stayed roughly the same from 2012 to 2013. The share of countries in this category was 27% in 2013, compared with 29% in 2012. Government restrictions on religion include efforts to control religious groups and individuals in a variety of ways, ranging from registration requirements to discriminatory policies and outright bans on certain faiths.The report also concluded that obstacles for religious minorities do not usually stand alone, but more often are part of a broader set of restrictions on religion. For example, of the 59 countries where the government specifically targets religious minorities, 43 also have high or very high overall government restrictions on religion.The new report is the sixth in a series of Pew Research reports based on two indexes (the Government Restrictions Index and the Social Hostilities Index) used to gauge the extent to which governments and societies

around the world impinge on religious beliefs and practices.As in previous years, Christians and Muslims – who together make up more than half of the global population – faced harassment in the largest number of countries. Christians were harassed, either by government or social groups, in 102 of the 198 countries included in the study (52%), while Muslims were harassed in 99 countries (50%).In recent years, there has been a marked increase in the number of countries where Jews were harassed. In 2013, harassment of Jews, either by government or social groups, was found in 77 countries (39%) – a seven-year high, the report said.Jews are much more likely to be harassed by individuals or groups in society than by governments. In Europe, for example, Jews were harassed by individuals or social groups in 34 of the region’s 45 countries (76%).Although the median level of both government restrictions and social hostilities involving religion decreased somewhat in 2013 among the 20 countries in the Middle East and North Africa region, the tumultuous Middle East – where Christianity, Judaism and Islam originated – still stands out as the area of the world with the highest levels of restrictions on religion.Syria, in the midst of a civil war, and Egypt, which saw its Muslim Brotherhood leader removed from power in 2013, each experienced very high levels of both government restrictions and social hostilities involving religion. Israel, the Palestinian territories, Iraq and Saudi Arabia all continued to have very high restrictions in one of the two categories, the report said.


India has highest level of social hostility involving religion: Pew Research - The American Bazaar
 
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India and Israel at the top of social hostility list can be seen on PDF too, it is truly an international social thermometer.
 
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India and Israel at the top of social hostility list can be seen on PDF too, it is truly an international social thermometer.
You have to look at the methodology of the actual report:

Primary Sources for 2013
1. Country constitutions
2. U.S. State Department annual reports on International Religious Freedom
3. U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom annual reports
4. U.N. Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief reports
5. Human Rights First reports in first and second years of coding; Freedom House reports in subsequent years of coding
6. Human Rights Watch topical reports
7. International Crisis Group country reports
8. United Kingdom Foreign & Commonwealth Office annual report on human rights
9. Council of the European Union annual report on human rights
10. Global Terrorism Database
11. European Network Against Racism Shadow Reports
12. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees reports
13. U.S. State Department annual Country Reports on Terrorism
14. Anti-Defamation League reports
15. U.S. State Department Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
16. Uppsala University’s Uppsala Conflict Data Program, Armed Conflict Database
17. Human Rights Without Frontiers “Freedom of Religion or Belief” newsletters

U.S. government reports with information on the situation in the United States

U.S. Department of Justice “Religious Freedom in Focus” newsletters and reports
• FBI Hate Crime Reports
"Pew Research did not use the commentaries, opinions or normative judgments of the sources; the sources were combed only for factual information on specific policies and actions."
Not only is the info from Israel likely to be in greater quantity than less-reported, more-restrictive countries, several of the sources are notable for disproportionately - often slanderously - skewering Israel while ignoring others. For example, the activities of Hamas are explicitly not counted while the Palestinian Authority is judged by it's stated policies rather than actual events. North Korea isn't even scored.

And the severity of restrictions or hostilities isn't evaluated, either. Given that both Israel and India host a multitude of religions by comparison to Muslim-majority countries like Saudi Arabia, it's not surprising that some mild, non-violent, "social hostility involving religion" in these countries exists, is it? That's not scored any different from the violent and murderous sort that denotes Pakistan.
 
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With rising income levels, openness and education levels, these nonsensical things will eventually diminish...
 
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You have to look at the rate, not just the total number......because India is the second most populous country in the world and probably the most diverse in terms of religion, ethnicity etc......
With China(the most populous) restricting information, India is bound to be the most/highest in many things....it's simple maths.


...and to the Pakistani fools......Pakistan is just below India...
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Very worrying for Sri Lanka.. No excuses.. The previous regime or atleast certain factions of if openly encouraged religious extremism.. On the other side of the coin religious fundamentalism especially the likes of Wahhabism is promoted by countries like Saudi Arabia in to more secular Muslim communities elsewhere, Thus making others very jittery and xenophobic of these alien cultures suddenly appearing in thier own countries, Demanding acceptance .. Govts and civil society needs to address these issues before it's too late
 
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