112 STAT. 2789PUBLIC LAW 105–292—OCT. 27, 1998
in worship, observance, practice, and teaching ’’. Governments
have the responsibility to protect the fundamental rights of
their citizens and to pursue justice for all. Religious freedom
is a fundamental right of every individual, regardless of race,
sex, country, creed, or nationality, and should never be arbitrar-
ily abridged by any government.
(4) The right to freedom of religion is under renewed and,
in some cases, increasing assault in many countries around
the world. More than one-half of the world’s population lives
under regimes that severely restrict or prohibit the freedom
of their citizens to study, believe, observe, and freely practice
the religious faith of their choice. Religious believers and
communities suffer both government-sponsored and govern-
ment-tolerated violations of their rights to religious freedom.
Among the many forms of such violations are state-sponsored
slander campaigns, confiscations of property, surveillance by
security police, including by special divisions of ‘‘religious
police’’, severe prohibitions against construction and repair of
places of worship, denial of the right to assemble and relegation
of religious communities to illegal status through arbitrary
registration laws, prohibitions against the pursuit of education
or public office, and prohibitions against publishing, distribut-
ing, or possessing religious literature and materials.
(5) Even more abhorrent, religious believers in many coun-
tries face such severe and violent forms of religious persecution
as detention, torture, beatings, forced marriage, rape, imprison-
ment, enslavement, mass resettlement, and death merely for
the peaceful belief in, change of or practice of their faith.
In many countries, religious believers are forced to meet
secretly, and religious leaders are targeted by national security
forces and hostile mobs.
(6) Though not confined to a particular region or regime,
religious persecution is often particularly widespread, system-
atic, and heinous under totalitarian governments and in coun-
tries with militant, politicized religious majorities.
(7) Congress has recognized and denounced acts of religious
persecution through the adoption of the following resolutions:
(A) House Resolution 515 of the One Hundred Fourth
Congress, expressing the sense of the House of Representa-
tives with respect to the persecution of Christians world-
wide.
(B) Senate Concurrent Resolution 71 of the One Hun-
dred Fourth Congress, expressing the sense of the Senate
regarding persecution of Christians worldwide.
(C) House Concurrent Resolution 102 of the One Hun-
dred Fourth Congress, expressing the sense of the House
of Representatives concerning the emancipation of the Ira-
nian Baha’i community.
(b) P
OLICY
.—It shall be the policy of the United States, as
follows:
(1) To condemn violations of religious freedom, and to pro-
mote, and to assist other governments in the promotion of,
the fundamental right to freedom of religion.
(2) To seek to channel United States security and develop-
ment assistance to governments other than those found to
be engaged in gross violations of the right to freedom of religion,
as set forth in the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, in the