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India is among the world’s highest supporters for religious freedom, according to new research. However, it found out that India still lags behind on several measures of free expression including government censorship, competitive elections and internet freedom.
Nonpartisan fact tank US-based Pew Research – that surveyed 38 countries and interviewed 40,786 people between April 5 to May 21, 2015 – found 84 per cent of Americans saying that religious freedom is very important.
Noting that in India there is strong support for gender equality and religious freedom, Pew in its survey said the global median stood at 74 percent. Overall, global publics oppose government censorship of the media, except in cases of national security. In India, 74 percent say media organisations should be able to publish information about large political protests in the country. Across the nations polled, a global median of 78 percent also say this, Pew said.
Support for internet freedom in India (38 percent) is among the lowest of all countries polled. Even though internet freedom ranks last among the six broad democratic rights included on the survey, majorities in 32 of 38 countries nonetheless say it is important to live in a country where people can use the internet without government censorship. Across the 38 nations, a median of 50 percent believe it is very important to live in a country with an uncensored internet, it said.
A global median of 65 percent say it is very important for women to have the same rights as men and in India, 71 percent of those polled agree, the report said. On the issue of equal rights for women, there are sharp differences between men and women in most of the countries in the study. In 24 nations, women are more likely than men to say it is very important for women to have equal rights.
“However, in India, there is no gender difference on this question,” Pew said.
In India, 49 percent believe it is very important to have honest, competitive elections with a choice of at least two political parties. Elections are clearly considered a central component of democracy around the world, and among the 38 nations in the study, a median of 61 percent agree. In India, 74 percent say media organisations should be able to publish information about large political protests in the country. Across the nations polled, a global median of 78 percent also say this, the report said.
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