Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights
Right to Privacy Program
Press Release- 7 August 2006
Removing Religion from National IDs a Positive
but Symbolic Step,
Respect for Freedom of Religion the Only Way to Confront Problems
The Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) today expressed support for the
proposal to remove religion from national identity (ID) cards. The proposal
will be discussed tomorrow at a workshop organized by the National Council
for Human Rights (NCHR). Although a positive step, the EIPR warned it would
not end discrimination faced by citizens in obtaining necessary official
documents because of their religious affiliation.
"Removing
religion from national ID cards would undoubtedly be a step forward as it
would send a clear message that religion is a private matter and that the
state is not interested in the religious affiliation of citizens except
where required by law," said EIPR Director Hossam Bahgat. "But violations of
freedom of religion in relation to official documents are far too serious to
be solved by such a symbolic gesture."
Over the past
two years, the EIPR's Right to Privacy Program has documented at least 170
cases of citizens who faced difficulties in obtaining necessary
identification documents because of the Interior Ministry's refusal to
recognize their chosen religious affiliation.
These cases
include more than 100 Coptic Christian citizens who had converted to Islam
before converting back to Christianity. Although they all obtained official
certificates from the Coptic Orthodox Church sanctioning their return to
Christianity, the Interior Ministry's Civil Affairs Department (CAD) still
refuses to recognize them as Christian in violation of the law.
EIPR researchers
have also documented more than 60 cases of Coptic citizens who were
automatically converted to Islam in CAD files after one of their parents
converted from Christianity while they were minors. Having reached the legal
age of capacity, the CAD arbitrarily denies their applications to identify
as Christian in their official documents.
In 3 cases
documented by the EIPR, the CAD has also refused to recognize the conversion
of citizens from Christianity to Islam despite the fact that they carry
conversion certificates from Al-Azhar. Moreover, an unknown number of Muslim
citizens who have converted to Christianity remain unable to have their new
religious affiliation recognized by the government in violation of the
constitutional and legal guarantees of the right to change one's religion.
Article 47 of
the Civil Affairs Law (no. 143/1994) explicitly grants citizens the right to
change any of the data listed in their CAD files, including their religious
affiliation.
"Removing
religion from one official identification document will change nothing if
CAD officials are allowed to continue to disregard the law," said Bahgat.
"Even in cases where citizens obtained court rulings recognizing their right
to have their religious conversion recognized, the Interior Ministry has
appealed the rulings, which proves that this unlawful conduct is an official
policy."
Whether or not
religion is listed on their national ID cards, these citizens remain subject
to the personal status law of a religion to which they do not adhere. In the
absence of an alternative civil personal status law, they face serious
problems in essential aspects of their lives, such as marriage, inheritance
and the registration of children.
The EIPR also
said Baha'i Egyptians continue to suffer from the Interior Ministry's new
policy forcing them to identify only as Muslim or Christian in exchange for
issuing them any identification documents. Prior to 2004, Baha'i Egyptians
had been able to obtain birth certificates, ID cards and other documents
recognizing their Baha'i faith or with no religious affiliation at all.
Discrimination faced by the Baha'i community has been recognized in the
NCHR's annual report for 2005-6.
Research
conducted by the EIPR reveals how this arbitrary conduct by the Interior
Ministry has left hundreds of Baha'is unable to register their children or
send them to schools without birth certificates. Some Baha'i youths have
reached the age of 16 and remain without the mandatory ID cards, rendering
them subject to legal penalties. Cases documented by the EIPR include that
of a student who was expelled from a public university last year for failing
to obtain the mandatory military service extension papers without a national
ID card, a widow who has been unable to receive her late husband's pension,
and even a citizen who has been unable to receive a death certificate for
his deceased Baha'i sister several months after she has passed away unless
he agrees to change her religious affiliation on the death certificate to
Christian.
"How would
Baha'i Egyptian citizens benefit from taking religion off national ID cards
if they are not able to issue death certificates for their dead relatives?"
asked Bahgat. "Now they are even facing difficulties issuing passports
despite the fact that religion is not listed on them because it remains
listed on the application forms."
The EIPR
concluded by welcoming the NCHR's initiative to hold the workshop and vowing
to support efforts towards the removal of religion from national IDs. The
organization added, however, that dealing with the real issues at hand will
not start until the Interior Ministry respects freedom of religion, as
guaranteed unconditionally by the Egyptian Constitution, the Civil Affairs
Law, and international treaties ratified by Egypt such as the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the African Charter of Human and
Peoples' Rights.
"Designating
Coptic Christmas as a national holiday did not end discrimination against
Copts," said Bahgat. "Action is what we need now, not gestures."