In Indonesia, it is legally required to specify a religion on official documents. Nonbelievers say they are being discriminated against.
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In Indonesia, it is legally required to specify a religion on official documents. Non-believers say they are being discriminated.
In Indonesia, it is legally required to specify a religion on official documents. Nonbelievers say they are being discriminated against.
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...
By Felix Corley On 14 January, after a 22-month trial from March 2023, a judge in the Russian-occupied port city of Sevastopol found two Jehovah's...
After being appointed as Minister of Housing in December 2022, Ravi Kahlon spent much of 2023 — particularly the latter half of the year —...
By Natalia Contreras, Votebeat and The Texas Tribune Feb. 3, 2025 "Some Texas lawmakers want to ban countywide voting on Election Day. Local officials...
The Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether Oklahoma can open St. Isidore: an online Roman Catholic charter school named after the patron saint of...
Editor's Note: In the old days before 1970 - yes - there was real terrorists. Now of days, it's mostly, False Flag Pseudo-operations, that is...
Fr Martin Sirju WORLD Interfaith Harmony Week was celebrated from February 1-7. The week is set aside by the United Nations since 2010 to focus on...
Google has announced that it will soon change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America” for U.S. users on its maps. In a post on the...