| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 11, 2005
SCHUMER-COLLINS: 15 SENATORS DEMAND U.S. TAKE STRONGER ACTION
AGAINST SAUDIS FOR EGREGIOUS VIOLATIONS OF RELIGIOUS FREEDOMS
Bipartisan Letter Sent in Anticipation of March 15th Deadline
for State Dept. to Act on Saudi Religious Freedom Violations
Freedom House Report Reveals Saudi Government Exports Extremist Religious
Teachings in America
Today, Senators Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Susan Collins (R-ME) were
joined by thirteen colleagues from both sides of the aisle in sending
a letter to Secretary Condoleezza Rice to express appreciation for the
Department of State’s 2004 designation of Saudi Arabia as a “country
of particular concern” (CPC) for its systematic, ongoing, and egregious
violations of religious freedom. The Senators also expressed a strong
desire to see the relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia
defined more clearly. This letter was sent in anticipation of the March
15 deadline for the State Department to act on their own 2004 designation
of Saudi Arabia as a severe violator of religious freedom as defined by
the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998.
Sen. Schumer said, “It is a massive contradiction that a country
we call an ally could be both so regressive in their own country and so
brazen in its propagation of anti-American, anti-women, anti-Semitic books,
publications, and practices. American security is undermined as the Saudi
government exports these hateful commodities to millions beyond its borders,
planting the seeds for new generations of terrorists and totalitarian
Wahhabi leaders.”
“This report raises some disturbing concerns about the spread of
extremist materials in American mosques and Islamic centers,” Senator
Collins said. “If we are going to win the war on terrorism, these
types of actions cannot be tolerated. It is important that the Saudi Arabian
government join us in this fight and stop supporting the spread of ideologies
that promote hatred and intolerance around the world.”
The Schumer-Collins bi-partisan letter refers in part to the Freedom
House’s Center for Religious Freedom report which gathered vast
amounts of Saudi government publications on the ideology of hate in America,
as well as Saudi intolerance towards its own citizens:
· Samples of over 200 books and other publications from American
mosques used to educate its members that preach a “Nazi-like hatred
for Jews” and “promote contempt for the United States because
it is ruled by legislated civil law rather than by totalitarian Wahhabi-style
Islamic law.”
· One such document, distributed through the Saudi Arabian Embassy’s
Cultural Dept. in Washington, is a fatwa against the taking of American
citizenship by Muslims and thereby “acquiescing to their infidelity
and accepting all their erroneous ways.”
· The report explicitly concludes that Saudi Arabia is the state
most responsible for the propagation of these publications within our
borders and that these publications are often official publications of
a Saudi ministry or distributed by the Embassy of Saudi Arabia in Washington,
D.C. to mosques and Islamic centers in American cities.
· Recent municipal elections completely shut women out of the process.
Saudi Arabia severely limits the freedom of movement of women and discriminates
against women in education, employment, access to healthcare, marriage,
and inheritance.
The Senators urge Sec. Rice to “to persuade the Saudi Arabian government
to work with the United States in curtailing their distribution …
and call for specific actions taken to condemn and curtail Saudi Arabian
support for extremist ideology, promote equality and reform within Saudi
Arabia, and to clearly outline a broad based foreign policy strategy that
will support these goals.”
In agreement with and in support of the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom, the Schumer-Collins letter also calls for the State
Department “to respond decisively to Saudi support for extremist
religious ideologies” as required by the International Religious
Freedom Act of 1998 for countries found to be severe violators of religious
freedom, by:
· Identifying Saudi agencies and officials responsible for violations
of religious freedom and issuing a proclamation barring Saudi officials
who propagate hateful and intolerant ideology from entering the U.S.;
· Issuing a demarche urging the government of Saudi Arabia to cease
support for activities throughout the world that explicitly promote hate
and human rights violations;
· Ordering the heads of U.S. agencies not to issue licenses or
authorities for the export of items on the Commerce Control List of dual-use
items to an agency or instrument of the government of Saudi Arabia that
is responsible for committing particularly severe violations of religious
freedom;
· Raise concerns at the highest levels with the government of Saudi
Arabia regarding the ongoing and repeated violations of internationally
recognized human rights and to develop specific initiatives to advance
human rights, including the rights of women, religious freedom, and the
rule of law.
The letter concluded, “Saudi Arabia’s efforts to export militant
Wahhabi ideology throughout the world inflame the type of anti-American
sentiments that lie behind the potential of terrorist attacks that continue
to be the greatest threat to our national security. Therefore, it is essential
that Saudi Arabia be held accountable for its support of radical Islamic
ideology.”
The Senators signing the letter are:
Schumer, Collins, Bayh, Chambliss, Smith, Brownback, Ensign, Lautenberg,
Coleman, Wyden, Dodd, Kohl, Nelson (NE), Dorgan, and Santorum.
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