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Secretary Kerry Speaks on the Connection of Religious Freedom and Foreign Policy

April 29, 2016 | Asia
April 29, 2016

ICC NOTE: Secretary of State John Kerry spoke in Houston, Texas, on the role religion plays in foreign policy. It was the first speech that exclusively focused on the topic of religion and foreign policy. The Office of Religion and Global Affairs in the State Department was established in 2013 to promote the President’s initiative for interfaith cooperation. While the State Department still has a long way to go in terms of promoting religious freedom globally, it is a positive sign to see the Secretary recognize the connection in a speech. Southeast Asia, which includes such nations as Vietnam, Indonesia, Burma, Laos, China, and North Korea, includes some of the worst violators of religious freedom. North Korea remains the worst place for Christians to live, and China continues its campaign to remove Churches and their crosses to limit Christianity’s power and rise in the communist nation. 

4/29/2016 Southeast Asia (VOA) – Saying governments cannot lead a world they do not understand, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry highlighted the impact of religion on foreign policy during a Tuesday speech in Houston, Texas.

“We cannot understand the world if we fail to comprehend and honor the central role that religion plays in the lives of billions of people,” Kerry said at Rice University.

It was his first speech focusing exclusively on the topic of religion and foreign policy.

However, a senior State Department official said Kerry has long recognized the importance of understanding religious dynamics as part of the “broader U.S. foreign policymaking.”

In 2013, Kerry established the State Department’s Office of Religion and Global Affairs as part of the Obama administration’s initiative to encourage interfaith cooperation.

“With 84 percent of people around the world identifying with a religious group, religion is a powerful force in global politics and civil society – one that must be taken seriously,” the State Department said in a 2015 fact sheet.

In his speech, Kerry touted religious initiatives that have taken place under his watch, including a 2015 workshop for religious leaders in Nigeria on the topic of corruption. He also noted how religion can have either a positive or a destabilizing influence on world affairs.

“It is part of what drives some to initiate war, others to pursue peace,” said Kerry, who added that extremist groups such as Islamic State have carried out atrocities under the veil of religion.

“They continue to kill Yazidis because they are Yazidis, Christians because they are Christians, and Shia because they are Shia,” said Kerry.

“Daesh is responsible for committing genocide against these groups in areas under its control,” he added, using an acronym for IS.

In addition, Kerry said Christians have been facing persecution or repression in regions including the Middle East and South Asia, Tibetan Buddhists face harassment in China, and the Rohingya population has been “singled out” for discrimination in Myanmar.

Kerry is on the first leg of a two-day trip to Texas that also will include a stop in Austin, where he will take part in a clean energy event and a summit focusing on the Vietnam War.

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