Published in Epoch Times July 1, 2020
A lawyer who has spent her career working for the welfare of missing and trafficked children has now turned her efforts to protecting the religious rights of children in China.
On June 2, Liz Yore filed three submissions to the United Nations special rapporteur (SR) on freedom of belief and religion. The first details religious rights abuses of Chinese children, while the second outlines the imprisonment by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) of two Catholic bishops, one of whom has been detained for 25 years, whose whereabouts are unknown.
The third, says Yore, alerts the SR to a September 2018 agreement between the Vatican and China, in which the Vatican “whether wittingly or not … aided and abetted a China campaign to wipe religion off the map of China.”
Special rapporteurs are independent, unpaid human rights experts appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council. Among other mandates, they investigate and assess complaints of a wide range of human rights abuses and violations, including those affecting religious freedom.
Banning Children, Teens From Religious Services
While China made itself a signatory to the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) in 1992, the CCP has nonetheless enacted laws to prohibit any child or teenager under 18 from attending or participating in religious services of any faith, even those most closely identified with Asia, Yore pointed out.
“The revised religious regulations … inhibit children under the age of 18 from participating in religious activities and religious education,” the State Department’s 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom: China states.“
The law mandates the teaching of atheism in schools, and a CCP directive provides guidance to universities on how to prevent foreign proselytizing of university students,” it states.
As underscored by Yore’s submission to the SR, Article 14 of the UNCRC specifically addresses children’s religious rights.“
Parties,” it states, “shall respect the right of the child to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion.”
Article 14 also enshrines “the rights and duties of the parents” to “provide direction to the child in the exercise of his or her right” to those freedoms.
There is a caveat in the convention, however.
“Freedom to manifest one’s religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety, order, health or morals, or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others.”
The CCP often uses such loopholes to justify that its repression of any kind of human right is for “public safety,” which it brings under the rubric of “national security” or “stability.”
However, Article 14 isn’t the only clause of the UNCRC that addresses the rights of a child in matters of the non-secular. The convention also protects the spiritual rights of children, in four subsequent articles.
For the spiritual well-being and development of children, signatories must “ensure that the child has access to information and material from a diversity of national and international sources.”
In another clause, the rights of disabled children, including their “spiritual development,” are enshrined in the UNCRC. And Article 27 recognizes “the right of every child to a standard of living adequate for the child’s physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development.”
Finally, Article 32 “recognizes the right of the child to be protected from economic exploitation and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to interfere with the child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical, mental, spiritual, moral or social development.”
Despite these promises, however, as a result of China’s new law, “300 million Chinese children are not allowed to darken the doors” of a house of worship, Yore said.
This “is the ending of religious practice in China for a generation.”
“Those voices are not going to be heard in China,” Yore said.
The Vatican, China, and Bishops
Yore is also concerned with the state of religion in China as a whole.
As a Catholic, Yore is particularly appalled by the September 2018 agreement signed by the Vatican and China, the first public agreement between the two since the CCP took over China in 1949.
Yore said that “the agreement is a catastrophe not only for the Catholics but for all religions.”