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Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience

NGO with ECOSOC consultative status at the United Nations
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Civil society platform of Fundamental Rights created by the EU FRA
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Member : European Federation for Freedom Of Belief - FOB
Member : European Network Of Religion and Belief - ENORB
Associate Director : International Council for Diplomacy and Dialogue

https://independent.academia.edu/caplc

FECRIS (Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Cults and Sects) Is Almost Entirely Financed by the French State : GONGO or NGO

First, the NGO Branch should be apprised that FECRIS is in actuality not an NGO because it is almost entirely financed by the French State in order to forward France’s policies to “combat” minority belief groups in international forums.

Under Article 70 of the UN Charter, the ECOSOC may make arrangements for representatives of the « specialized agencies”, established by intergovernmental agreement, to participate without a vote in its deliberations, while under Article 71 it may make suitable arrangements for consultation with « non-governmental organizations » which are concerned with matters within its competence. Hence, under the UN Charter « specialized agencies » (governmental) and « NGOs » (private) are two distinct categories.

The Resolution of 25 July 1996 regulating the consultative relationship between the UN and NGOs indicates clearly that NGOs must be independent from governments. It also reproduces provisions regulating the financing of NGOs adopted in 1968 following revelations that the CIA had been funding some NGOs (without their knowledge). These provisions are as follows:

The basic resources of the organisation shall be derived in the main part from contributions of the national affiliates or other components or from individual members. Where voluntary contributions have been received, their amounts and donors shall be faithfully revealed to the Council Committee on Non-Governmental Organisations. Where, however, the above criterion is not fulfilled and an organisation is financed from other sources, it must explain to the satisfaction of the Committee its reasons for not meeting the requirements laid down in this paragraph. Any financial contribution or other support, direct or indirect, from a Government to the organisation shall be openly declared to the Committee through the Secretary-General and fully recorded in the financial and other records of the organisation and shall be devoted to purposes in accordance with the aims of the United Nations.

The normal financing of NGOs is through the contributions of individual members to reflect their representation of civil society. As an exception to this rule, State funding should be transparent and comply with the aims of the United Nations.

FECRIS has been financed almost entirely by the French State since 2001 – the ratio of public funding by the French State for FECRIS has averaged 92 per cent since 2001.

FECRIS has three member associations in France:

1) National Union of Associations of Defense of the Family and the Individual (UNADFI);

2) Center Against Mental Manipulations (CCMM) ; and

3) Study Group on Movements of Thought for the Prevention of the Individual) (GEMPPI).

All three of these organizations are also almost entirely funded by the French State:

  • UNADFI has averaged 97% public funding by the French State over the last ten years;
  • CCMM has averaged 93% public funding by the French State over the last years; and
  • GEMPPI has averaged 91% public funding by the French State over the last years.

While these associations pretend to defend human rights and to protect the interests of individuals against “sectarian organizations” they deem objectionable, this is not the case. In reality, they are not representative of civil society as their extremely low support from members of the public shows. They only survive through financial support by the French State.

Moreover, NGOs almost totally funded by States are extremely suspect when they operate in the human rights field. Such organizations are labeled as Government Organized NGOs or “GONGOs”, a phenomenon detailed in the recent state-of-the-art Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems of UNESCO:

The most difficult question about the independence of NGOs is whether they come under governmental influence. Individual governments do at times try to influence the NGO community in a particular field, by establishing NGOs that promote their policies. This has been recognized by quite common use of the acronym GONGO, to label a government-organized NGO.

Also, in more authoritarian societies, NGOs may find it very difficult to act independently and they may not receive acknowledgment from other political actors even when they are acting independently.

Beyond these unusual situations, there is a widespread prejudice that government funding leads to government control. In the field of human rights, it would damage an NGO for such a perception to arise, so Amnesty International has strict rules that it will not accept direct government funding for normal activities.

On the other hand, development and humanitarian relief NGOs need substantial resources, to run their operational programs, so most of them readily accept official funds. While these NGOs would like the security of a guaranteed budget for their administrative overheads, governments generally only want to support field costs for project.

So, contrary to development and humanitarian relief NGOs who yearn for government funding, true human rights organizations are very reluctant to accept it in order to preserve their independence.

They are so aware of the problem that on June 6, 2006, eleven prominent NGOs adopted the International Non-Governmental Organizations (INGO) Accountability Charter.[2] Stressing the need for civil society legitimacy, accountability and transparency of NGOs, they invited other INGOs to undertake the same commitment in order to promote and garner support for the highest common standards of conduct for NGOs working trans-nationally.

In the Charter, the signatories expound that they are independent non-profit organizations and they commit to the following:

We aim to be both politically and financially independent. Our governance, programmes and policies will be non-partisan, independent of specific governments, political parties and the business sector.

According to these international standards, an NGO pretending to act for human rights should be politically and financially independent.

Not only is it suspect to find government funding in NGOs which pretend to combat violations of human rights by the States, it is also suspect, in case of an NGO fighting against human rights violations purportedly committed by private groups as FECRIS pretends to do, that this NGO is almost entirely government funded and is in essence a camouflaged government organization.

This indicates that the NGO is used by the government to fight against certain targeted groups of civil society.

This phenomenon of GONGOs has been very well described at the 58th Annual United Nations Department of Public Information Conference at New York in September 2005, when Mrs. Shirin Ebadi, Iran lawyer, Nobel Peace Price 2003, explained it in the following terms:

A central attribute of an NGO is its independence from government. This characteristic, when combined with popular appeal, is the guarantee of its authenticity and effectiveness. Independence does not mean that NGOs cannot receive assistance from their own or other governments, but rather acceptance of such assistance should not influence their autonomy and non-partisanship. (…)

Another method undemocratic governments use to undermine the credibility and effectiveness of NGOs is to use the name for groups of their own creation. Members of such government controlled NGOs are then sent to international gatherings to issue false reports and raise irrelevant questions in order to distract public attention from the dismal human right record of those in power.

Such groups, which are in fact government NGOs known as GONGOs, actually present the agenda of the autocratic state while pretending to be non-partisan and by doing so, prevent the true voice of the people to reach the international community.

GONGOs are present in Africa supported by autocratic States.  But this situation has also been developing in Western democracies, where governments control NGOs by financing them quasi-entirely so that they forward their policies.

This growing and alarming global trend has been roundly criticized by NGOs, human rights groups and the media.

Gongos are sprouting everywhere; they are in China, Cuba, France, Tunisia and even in the United States.

Gongos are government-organized nongovernmental organizations.

Behind this contradictory, an important and growing global trend that deserves more scrutiny: Governments are funding and controlling nongovernmental organizations, often stealthily.

Some Gongos are benign, others irrelevant. But many, including those I mentioned, are dangerous. Some act as the thuggish arm of repressive governments.

Others use the practices of democracy to subtly undermine democracy at home. Abroad, the Gongos of repressive regimes lobby the United Nations and other international institutions, often posing as representatives of citizen groups with lofty aims when, in fact, they are nothing but agents of the governments that fund them. Some governments embed their Gongos deep in the societies of other countries and use them to advance their interests abroad.

This description precisely fits the case of FECRIS, which pretends to fight for human rights, but has been nearly entirely subsidized from the very beginning by the French government to promote its policies and to participate in international forums such as the Council of Europe, the OSCE and the United Nations to masquerade as an independent NGO while supporting the environment of religious intolerance promoted by French government officials who work for MIVILUDES.

This worrisome situation has been exposed by the UN Special Rapporteur for Religious Freedom in her report following her visit to France from 18 to 29 September 2005 in the following terms:[6]

  1. However, she [the Special Rapporteur] is of the opinion that the policy and measures that have been adopted by the French authorities have provoked situations where the right to freedom of religion or belief of members of these groups has been unduly limited. Moreover, the public condemnation of some of these groups, as well as the stigmatization of their members, has led to certain forms of discrimination, in particular vis-à-vis their children.

And the Special Rapporteur pointed out the role played by government subsidized organizations, i.e. FECRIS’ affiliates UNADFI, CCMM and GEMMPI, in the stigmatization campaigns which lead to violations of minorities’ rights:

  1. Moreover, she recommends that the Government monitor more closely preventive actions and campaigns that are conducted throughout the country by private initiatives or Government-sponsored organizations, in particular within the school system in order to avoid children of members of these groups being negatively affected.

Nevertheless, FECRIS and its affiliates continue to go forward with their derogatory campaigns to denigrate religious minorities on behalf of the government. Yet, what the government may not do directly because it violates human rights treaties mandating religious pluralism and tolerance, it may not do indirectly by almost entirely subsidizing GONGOs like FECRIS to engage in activities in contravention of religious neutrality and tolerance. This violates the letter and spirit of human rights treaties and contravenes UN NGO standards.

FECRIS Is Devoted to Purposes Contrary to the Aims of the UN

At the Human Dimension Implementation Meeting of the OSCE on 29 September 2009 in Warsaw, FECRIS stated:

We do not believe that cults have any role to play in a body such as OSCE whose aim, among others, is the protection of those persecuted for their religious beliefs. Cults are rarely persecuted. They are not religions or even belief systems.

This denial of the most basic rights to minority belief groups and the lobby of FECRIS in international forums so that their voice would not be heard is totally contrary to the aims of the UN as expressed in the Charter, of practicing tolerance and dialogue and of promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion.

While FECRIS portrays itself as a collection of national associations protecting the family, the individual and democratic society against “sectarian” activities, in reality, this group fosters and fuels discrimination and intolerance directed at minority religious organizations and their members in Europe through the dissemination of false and misleading information about them and through actions which interfere with their right to freedom of religion, freedom of association and freedom from discrimination.

FECRIS, under the guise of fighting against violations of human rights by minority belief groups which it labels “totalitarian groups” to make its activity look in alignment with the UN purposes, actually encourages activities contrary to fundamental human rights and the Rule of Law.

Even if the concerned beliefs or practices are not favored by FECRIS or the French authorities, it is not the State’s role to finance an ideological and intolerant fight against minority belief groups.

See all the videos : https://freedomofconscience.eu/freedom-of-religion-from-the-uscirf-report-on-persecutions-in-russia-to-violations-in-europe-fecris-is-almost-entirely-financed-by-the-french-state-gongo-or-ngo/

read the full docment : FECRIS Is Almost Entirely Financed by the French State GONGO or NGO 2021

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ACTIVITES CAP LC 2018 / 2020

Side-event : The Pandemic and Forced Organ Harvesting – Europe’s Opportunity to End its Illusions about China december 2020

13 European NGOs urge China, Iran and Russia to release prisoners from a dozen religious groups in light of the COVID-19 threat december 2020

How the Chinese Communist Party Robs Children of Their Religious Faith december 2020

The Religious Factor in the Farmers Bills Protests in India: A Sikh Voice december 2020

Signing letter : We appeal to the UN, the USA and the European Union to take immediate action against air strikes by the Turkish state in Sinjar November 2020

Letter in Support of Having the French Anti-separatism Bill Reviewed by the Venice Commission November 2020

NGOs accuse Irak saying that « Êzîdî culture is under threat of extinction and erasure from history » Ocotber 2020

10 Experts’ Opinions on Tai Ji Men Case July 2020

India : JASWANT SINGH KHALRA MEMORIAL LECTURE & BOOK LAUNCH November 2020

Pakistan : A Beleaguered Community. The Growing Target Killings, Violence, Legal Discrimination and Social Exclusion of The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community International Religion Freedom Ministerial side event November 2020

China Denies Children Their Freedom of Religion and Belief International Religion Freedom Ministerial side event November 2020

France : International Religion Freedom Ministerial side event Separatism and Human Rights November 2020

International Interdisciplinary Conference ‘Religious Freedom and Education’, 8-10 October, 2020

International Interdisciplinary Conference ‘Religious Freedom and Education’, 8-10 October, 2020

Re: Request to Impose Sanctions to Stop Turkey’s War Crimes in Northeast Syria and Beyond Under EO 13894 October 2020

Thierry Valle |President of the Coordination of Associations and Individuals for Freedom of Conscience, France August 2020

HRC45 – CAP Liberté de Conscience joins ACLU’s demands to the OHCHR for the elaboration of the report on structural racism and law enforcement September 2020

HRC 45 : Unabated Religious Persecution and the Danger of an Escalation — A Case Study on 20 Years of Persecution of Falun Gong in People’s Republic of China September 2020

HRC 45 : Violating the Human Rights of Members of Shincheonji in South Korea September 2020

HRC 45 : Report on the conditions and basic needs of citizens returning from displacement camps to Sinjar and its Southern area specifically September 2020

HRC 45: Jaswant Singh Khalra was remembered today at the 45th Session of the UN Human Rights Council September 2020

45th Session Human Rights Council : shincheonji oral statement September 2020

This World Day against Death Penalty the International Community must take immediate steps to ensure states repeal laws which mandate the death penalty for apostasy or blasphemy

523 NGOs wrote to the UN Human Rights Treaty Bodies and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights urge them to schedule country reviews no later than 2021 September 2020

The renewal of the mandate of the Special Envoy for the promotion of freedom of religion or belief outside the EU

Urgent Call for the Dropping of All Charges Against Christian Pastor Keshav Raj Acharya

Letter to the Vatican

Sign on Letter to South Korean Minister of Foreign Affairs Religious Freedom Violations

Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Letter

the case of Huma Younus : Christian Pakistani girl who was kidnapped

Letter to the High Commissioner for Human Rights on the Implementation of the Resolution on Police Violence and Structural Racism July 2020

A Letter to the Foreign Minister of South Korea on the Situation of Shincheonji July 2020

IRFR Letter to POTUS on Hong Kong June 2020

Letter to Ambassador Yasseen on recognition of Iraqi evangelical churches June 2020

Signatures on the China Coalition’s Emergency Internet Freedom Funding Letter June 2020

Urgent call for COVID-19 response for Refugees and Asylum Seekers june 2020

Joint letter to Vietnam’s Prime Minister May 2020

Open letter to UN Asia-Pacific Regional Group on China’s appointment to UN HRC Consultative Group May 2020

HRC 44th session Written statement : Croatia Discrimination based on ethnicity and disregard for the best interest of a child june 2020

HRC 44th session Written statement : An act of horrific brutality against a humane and compassionate Ahmadi woman charged under the Blasphemy law june 2020

HRC 44th session Written statement : Scapegoating members of Shincheonji for COVID-19 in the Republic of Korea

Petition to preserve the cemeterie in Vilnius Lithuania June 2020

Sign-On Letter re Vietnam Hmong and Montagnard Christians June 2020

The continuation of the mandate of the Special Envoy for the promotion of freedom of  religion or belief outside the EU June 2020

Experts raise Vietnam’s human rights violations against Christians in letter to US  President June 2020

Joint letter to Vietnam's Prime Minister June 2020

Open letter to UN Asia-Pacific Regional Group on China’s appointment to UN HRC Consultative  Group June 2020

Urgent call for COVID-19 response for Refugees and Asylum Seekers June 2020

AHMADIYYA IN SCHOLARLY PERSPECTIVE June 2020

Experts raise Vietnam’s human rights violations against Christians in letter to US President June 2020

Report to the United Nations General Assembly on Eliminating Intolerance and Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief and the Achievement of Sustainable Development Goal 16 (SDG 16) HRC 44 June 2020

Letter to Secretary Pompeo April 2020

China HRC Consultative Group April 2020

IRF Roundtable Letter – Ramy Kamel April 2020

PETITION TO PRESERVE THE CEMETERIES IN THE OLD CITY OF LVIV April 2020

The continuation of the mandate of the Special Envoy for the promotion of freedom of religion or belief outside the EU April 2020

HRC 43 A coalition of NGOs questions the People’s Republic of China at the United Nations March 2020

HRC 43 Oral Statement on Religious Freedom in Russia  March 2020

HRC 43 Prolonged discrimination of religious minority in Germany March 2020

HRC 43 Status report Ezidis for the General Director of the United Nations (UN) March 2020

HRC 43 SOUTH KOREA – Coronavirus and Shincheonji: Stopping the Witch Hunt – Urgent Appeal from Human Rights Groups March 2020

HRC43 | Support consensus renewal of the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders March 2020

religious freedom situation in India February 2020

Multifaith letter regarding Huma Younus February 2020

Recognizing Freedom of Conscience and Religious Objections to State Mandated Vaccination and Ending the Persecution of the Unvaccinated People of Faith February 2020

End The Persecution of The Church of Almighty God Now! February 2020

Human Rights in Thailand and Malaysia : The case of the Ahmadis refugees in Thailand and Malaysia March 2020

Declaration of Principles for the International Religious Freedom Alliance February 2020

2019 Annual Report on the Chinese Communist Government’s Persecution of The Church of Almighty God Released Today January 2020

2019

FORB Roundtable meeting 10 December

Human Rights : Where are we at ? Past and Future

Universal Periodic Review pre-session Spain

Signin letter 2019

Sign On Letter: USCIRF Reauthorization

Eelam  Tamils  Genocide  in  Sri  Lanka

Another Minority Religion Under Threat in Russia: Who Is Afraid of Sri Prakash?

NGOs write to international Govt leaders to alert on 45 reporters of Bitter Winter arrested in China

Persecution of Chinese Refugees of The Church of Almighty God in South Korea Should Not Start Again

seekers from The Church of Almighty God (CAG)

Re: Pakistan’s Blasphemy Laws

OSCE 2019

Is Religious Freedom ever possible in the Russian Federation ?

COMPILATION OF WRITTEN RECOMMENDATIONS

OSCE HIDM 2019 Prasun Prakash

OSCE HIDM 2019 : Is Religious Freedom ever possible in the Russian Federation ?

Prasun Prakash Is Religious Freedom ever possible in the Russian Federation ?

From Warsaw to Paris: MIVILUDES will cease to exist on 1 January 2020

FOB at the Human Dimension Implementation Meeting 2019 in Warsaw

40th session of the Human Rights Council

Universal Periodic Review of China: NGOs Strike Back

HRC40 | States should defend environmental human rights defenders

Oral statement on China General Debate Item 6 – 40th HRC session

rejection of asylum in Japan for a persecuted religious minority in China

Human rights situation of Uyghur minority in Xinxiang region in China must be criticised

The Church of Almighty God’s Refugees in Japan: A Statement at the United Nations

North Korean Overseas Workers

Persecution of Uighur people in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (UAR), China

Limitations of religious freedom in China are now worse than they even were since the Cultural Revolution

Asylum Seekers from The Church of Almighty God in Japan

U.N. religious freedom expert seeks visit to China’s Xinjiang

The ban of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the Russian Federation

40th Human Rights Council Session : Clustered interactive dialogue with: Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief

41st session of the Human Rights Council

HRC 41 written statement : Misuse and Abuse of the Pre-trial Detention and the FIES System in Spain & the Kokorevs Case

hrc 41 written statement : Call for International Support against Norway’s requirement for the wearing of religious headgear for ID photographs

HRC 41 written statement : The case of the Ahmadis refugees in Thailand and Malaysia

HRC 41 writen statement : Forcible Deprogramming of Members of Shincheonji in Republic of Korea

HRC 41 oral statement : Forcible Deprogramming of Members of Shincheonji in Republic of Korea

42nd session of the Human Rights Council

International Peace Day Conference: Emerging religions persecuted by the CCP are making efforts for world peace

International Day of Peace UN Geneva : Totalitarian Regimes Are the Biggest Hindrance to World Peace

Nazioni Unite (ONU): “International Day of Peace”

Broadening the impact of Peace Wave

Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status : Misuse and abuse of the pre-trial detention and the FIES system in Spain & the Kokorevs Case

Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, non-governmental organizations in special consultative status : Give Kashmiris a voice for self determination

Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, non-governmental organizations in special consultative status : Dalibor Mocevic v. Croatia: denial of justice and ethnic discrimination in a property right case

Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status : Religion-based Refugees in France: The Church of Almighty God

Joint Statement of Ukrainian and Georgian Women at the UN “Women. Peace. Strategic Partnership. Joint Activities”

100 NGOs at UN Blast China’s Anti-Muslim Racism, Protest Silencing of NGOs

UN 42nd Session of the Human Rights Council ITEM 4 join oral statement FUNDACION VIDA – GRUPO ECOLOGICO VERDE – CAP LIBERTE DE CONSCIENCE – German sect filters

UN 42nd Session of the Human Rights Council Item 6 outcomes NORWAY Protection of Human Rights in Norway

UN 42nd Session of the Human Rights Council Oral Statement about the misuse and abuse of the pretrial detention and the FIES system: the Kokorev case

United Nations General Assembly : DAFOH Discusses Role of Forced Organ Harvesting as a Tool of Religious Persecution and Genocide in China

UNSG Guterres For China Now Censors In Geneva As He Has In NY For 429 Days Banning Press For CEFC China Energy

2018

 70th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights – A Commitment from Civil Society December 2018

Eelam Tamils Genocide in Sri Lanka December 2018

side-event 39th HRC session : FORB IN EU AND RUSSIA september 2018

side-event 39th HRC session : THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS INVALIDATES APPLICATION OF THE RUSSIAN LAW ON EXTREMISM TO PEACEFUL RELIGIOUS GROUPS september 2018

side-event 39th HRC session : RELIGIOUS DISCRIMINATION AND STATE NEUTRALITY: THE CASE OF HUNGARY september 2018

Oral statement 39th HRC session : Protection for the Religious Minorities of Afghanistan september 2018

Oral statement 39th HRC session : UPR OUTCOMES ON RUSSIAN FEDERATION september 2018

Oral statement 39th HRC session : UPR OUTCOMES ON GERMANY september 2018

39th HRC session joint written statement : It is time the Russian Federation ceases all persecutions against Religious Minorities september 2018

39th HRC session written statement : The denial of the religious plurality by Russian Federation september 2018

39th HRC session written statement : Religious persecution of a new religious movement in China september 2018

39th HRC session written statement: Protection for the Non-Muslim Religious Minorities of
Afghanistan september 2018

Side-event OSCE HDIM 2018 : How Universal is “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights September 2018

OSCE HIDM 2018 Working session 7 RELIGIOUS DISCRIMINATION AND STATE NEUTRALITY: THE CASE OF HUNGARY September 2018

Side-event OSCE HDIM 2018 : Freedom of Belief, No Discrimination and Telorance in the OSCE area September 2018

OSCE HIDM 2018 Working session 6 : The Denial of Religious Plurality in Russia September 2018

Side-event OSCE HDIM 2018 : The Religious Freedom in Eastern OSCE countries September 2018

OSCE HDIM 2018 : COMPILATION OF WRITTEN RECOMMENDATIONS September 2018

Faith and Freedom summit June 2018

Religious persecution in China denounced at the European Parliament June 2018

Chine : 1,5 million de personnes emprisonnées pour leur foi – La violation de la liberté de religion en Chine dénoncée au Parlement Européen juin 2018

Déclaration aux Nations Unies 38em session du Conseil des droits de l'homme: Principe de la laïcité et liberté de religion en France juin 2018

Joint oral statement at the 38th session of the Human Rights Council : Religious Freedom in the Russian Federation June 2018

38th session of the Human Rights Council Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience. The Russian Federation's religious freedom at the crossroads: barriers for indigenous nomadic shamanism June 2018

38th session of the Human Rights Council Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status The Role of FECRIS and Anti-Cult Organization in Russia June 2018

Join oral statement 38th session Human Rights Council :
Religious Freedom in China June 2018

38th session Human Rights Council Written statement submitted by Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience. Arbitrary Detention – China June 2018

 Freedom of Religion or Belief and the Right to Asylum: The Case of China June 2018

The Russian Federation and Religious Freedom : The hidden factor behind the bad religion concept may 2018

United Nations Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review Germany May 2018

United Nations 30th UPR session : The Russian Federation and Religious Freedom May 2018

Deterioration of Religious Freedom in Eastern Europe at the United NationsMarch 2018

CAP LC organise à l’ONU une conférence sur la détérioration de la liberté religieuse en Europe de l'Est March 2018

Oral statement at the 37th session of the Human Rights council : Universal Periodic Review Czechia March 2018

Déclaration orale de CAP Liberté de Conscience à la 37ème session du Conseil des Droits de l’Homme aux Nations Unies (Genève) : Liberté religieuse et persécutions en Chine : Le cas de l'Église de Dieu Tout-Puissant March 2018

La France livrera-t-elle des réfugiés à leurs bourreaux ? March 2018

Conférence sur le refus des demandes d'asile en France pour les
réfugiés religieux chinois membres de l'Eglise du Dieu Tout-Puissant
March 2018

Le déni de la liberté religieuse en Chine et le cas de l'Église du Dieu Tout-Puissant exposés à la 37e session du Conseil des droits de l'homme aux Nations Unies March 2018

The denial of religious freedom in China and the case of The Church of Almighty God exposed at the 37th session of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations March 2018

Written statement submitted by Coordination des associations et des particuliers pour la liberté de conscience. CAP Liberté de Conscience expresses its concerns regarding the situation of minority religions in Hungary February 2018

Written statement* submitted by Coordination des associations et des particuliers pour la liberté de conscience, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status : Religious refugees (Church of Almighty God) from China denied asylum in Europe February 2018

International Convention «Law and Freedom of Belief in Europe, a difficult journey» January 2018

Laïcité and religious freedom: A coalition of NGOs questions France at the United Nations January 2018

Faith and Freedom Summit
https://faithandfreedomsummit.eu/
The Faith and Freedom Summit is not an organization. It’s a campaign proposed and run by a large coalition of faith-based and non faith-based NGOs and supported by many EU stakeholders. It has been launched on June 28, 2018 with a high-level launch event. This non-partisan event gathered high-level thought-leaders to highlight where religious freedom is hindered in European Union today, to assess areas that need to be improved as regards the protection of freedom of religion or belief, and to be a force of proposal to outline policies toward a greater respect of religious diversity in Europe.
FoRB Roundtable Brussels-EU
https://www.forbroundtable.org/
The FoRB Roundtable Brussels-EU is an informal group of individuals from civil society who gather regularly to discuss FoRB issues on a non-attribution basis. It is simply a safe space where participants gather, speak freely in sharing ideas and information, and propose joint advocacy actions to address specific FoRB issues and problems globally.

Contact : +336 70 66 04 42 contact@coordiap.com

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