Religious Freedom in the World Report 2014
religious freedom 2014

In more than half the countries of the world religious freedom is curtailed. That is the finding of a comprehensive report published by Aid to the Church in Need—the “Religious Freedom Report 2014.” The survey—conducted by journalists and scholars and covering the years 2012-2014—shows that in 116 of the world’s nations, freedom of worship is obstructed to one degree or another, ranging from mild harassment and discrimination to outright persecution and violence.

The Report classifies 20 countries as manifesting a “high” degree of religious intolerance or active persecution. Of this group, 14 countries are home to religious minorities that suffer at the hands of Muslim extremists. They are: Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Maldives, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. In the remaining six—Burma (Myanmar), China, Eritrea, North Korea, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan—authoritarian regimes are responsible for repressing religious freedom.

The report also documents “aggressive atheism” alongside a rise in anti-Semitism in Western Europe, as well as “religious illiteracy” on the part of Western policy-makers that gravely complicates the conduct of foreign policy.

For a 32-page Executive Summary of the Report, please click here. For more information or access to the full text of the “Religious Freedom Report 2014,” please contact:

Joop Koopman
Communications Manager
Aid to the Church in Need-US
917 608 1989
joop@acnusa.org