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ANSWERS TO
QUESTIONS
MOST
COMMONLY
ASKED BY
MEDIA
Why has the German government tried to
portray Scientology as controversial?
Germany and, indeed, much of Central Europe, has a long and bitter history of religious intolerance and persecution, a trend which has continued into the present. Many religious and ethnic minorities have become the targets of escalating incidents of violence, xenophobia and religious discrimination.
Unfortunately, many government officials in Germany continue to fuel the intolerance. The Kohl government left a dismal legacy as far as human and civil rights are concerned. Muslims, Charismatic Christians, Jehovahs Witnesses, Hindus, Scientologists and in some cases even Jews are among those who have been denied fundamental rights because of their race or religion. In recent years, the German government has been strongly criticized in more than 25 reports from international human rights bodies including the United Nations Human Rights Committee, the Helsinki Commission, the United States State Department, and a British Ad-Hoc Human Rights Committee composed of Lords and scholars.
In 1997, a study by the Human Rights Centre of the University of Essex, England, found that, In Germany, democracy is used as an ideology to impose conformity. It has been dismaying to discover that the state, and some of its politicians and people, are using what are known from the past to be well-worn paths of discrimination and intolerance. The U.S. State Reporter has criticized the German government for the clearly discriminatory practice of prevent[ing] a person from practicing his or her profession of participating in public or private fora solely based on that persons religion or belief.
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