In Indonesia, it is legally required to specify a religion on official documents. Non-believers say they are being discriminated.
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In Indonesia, it is legally required to specify a religion on official documents. Nonbelievers say they are being discriminated against.
In Indonesia, it is legally required to specify a religion on official documents. Non-believers say they are being discriminated.
Indonesia's Constitutional Court ruled that citizens must profess a faith on official documents, rejecting atheists' petitions for non-religious...
By Felix Corley and Mushfig Bayram On 21 January, President Sadyr Japarov signed into law two new laws which continue to restrict freedom of...
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A House lawmaker's claim that most UNESCO members are atheists is impossible to verify, as the organization does not maintain a public record of its...
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By Eugene Whong and Cici Zhang Radio Free Asia asked DeepSeek, the Chinese-made artificial intelligence platform that earlier this week beat out...
By Natalia Contreras, Votebeat and The Texas Tribune Feb. 3, 2025 "Some Texas lawmakers want to ban countywide voting on Election Day. Local officials...