Fitna The OIC, on 28 March 2008, joined the criticism of the film
Fitna by
Dutch lawmaker
Geert Wilders, which features disturbing images of violent acts juxtaposed with alleged verses from the
Quran.
Houthis In March 2015, the OIC announced its support for the
Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen against the
Zaydi Houthis.
Israeli–Palestinian conflict The OIC supports a
two-state solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The OIC calls for a
boycott of Israeli products in an effort to pressure Israel into ending the occupation of the
Palestinian territories. At a 2013 meeting in
Conakry, Guinea, Secretary-General
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu said that foreign ministers would discuss the possibility of cutting ties with any state that recognised
Jerusalem as the capital of Israel or that moves its embassy to its environs. At a December 2017 extraordinary meeting held in response US President
Donald Trump's decision to recognise Jerusalem, the "Istanbul Declaration on Freedom for Al Quds". was adopted. In September 2019, the OIC condemned
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plans to
annex the eastern portion of the occupied
West Bank known as the
Jordan Valley. In January 2024, the OIC expressed support for South Africa's
ICJ genocide case against Israel.
India Islam is the second-largest
religion in India after
Hinduism. Over 200 million
Muslims constitute approximately 15% of the country's population.
India has the largest Muslim population other than
Muslim-majority or Islamic states. However,
India's relationship with Pakistan (an
Islamic state), has featured
hostilities and armed conflict since the
1947 Partition of India. The poor relationship between them impacted India–OIC relations due to
Pakistan's status as a founding member. India pushed for the OIC to accept it as a member state, arguing that
Indian Muslims comprise 11% of the world's Muslim population; Pakistan has staunchly opposed this. Pakistan cites
its conflict with India over the Kashmir region as its rationale. It frequently accuses India of perpetrating
human rights abuses against Kashmiris in the Indian-administered territory of
Jammu and Kashmir. The region has experienced an
ongoing militant uprising since the 1980s. The OIC has been urged to press India on the Kashmir dispute, and has faced pushback from Indian officials for occasional references to Jammu and Kashmir. Historically, the Muslim world has largely lent its support to Pakistan on the issue. The first OIC summit held in 1969 in
Rabat did not address the dispute, while granting India membership was discussed. The head of the Indian delegation addressed the summit. The erstwhile
President of Pakistan,
Yahya Khan, reportedly expressed mixed views. The Indian delegation, led by then
Indian President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmad, was scheduled to attend the summit but ultimately was not allowed in due to Pakistan's controversial boycott threat. Differences between the two states led Pakistan to keep India out for the final session of the 1969 conference and all OIC subsequent summits.
2019 Pulwama attack and India–Pakistan standoff On 14 February 2019, a
suicide-bombing attack by a Muslim militant in Jammu and Kashmir killed over 40 Indian soldiers, for which responsibility was claimed by
Jaish-e-Mohammed, a
Pakistan-based terrorist group. In March 2019,
India conducted airstrikes in Pakistani territory, which subsequently led to the
2019 India–Pakistan military standoff. After these events,
Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj was invited to participate in an OIC summit. However, Pakistan protested this development and demanded that India be blocked from the event, accusing the latter of an unprovoked violation of Pakistani airspace while Indian officials claimed that the strike was carried out on terrorist-training camps. Following requests by Pakistan shortly after the 14 February attack, the OIC held an emergency meeting on 26 February. The organisation subsequently condemned India's military response to the attack and advised both sides to exercise restraint. For the first time in five decades, the
United Arab Emirates invited India as a "guest of honour" to attend the inaugural plenary 46th meeting of OIC foreign ministers in
Abu Dhabi on 1 and 2 March 2019, overriding protests by Pakistan. In response Pakistan boycotted the meeting. Indian Foreign Minister Swaraj headed the Indian delegation at the summit. On 18 April 2020, OIC issued a statement, urging the
Modi administration of India to take urgent steps to "stop the growing tide of
Islamophobia", citing
attacks by
Hindu nationalists against Indian Muslims and the allegation against Muslims of spreading
COVID-19 in the country.
Cartoons of Muhammad Cartoons of Muhammad, published in a Danish newspaper in September 2005, offended a number of Muslims. The
Third Extraordinary Session of the Islamic Summit Conference in December 2005 condemned publication of the cartoons, resulting in broader coverage of the issue by news media in Muslim countries. Subsequently, violent demonstrations throughout the Islamic world resulted in multiple deaths.
Human rights OIC created the
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam. Critics of the CDHR state bluntly that it is "manipulation and hypocrisy," "designed to dilute, if not altogether eliminate, civil and political rights protected by international law" and attempts to "circumvent these principles [of freedom and equality]."
Human Rights Watch says that OIC "fought doggedly" and successfully within the United Nations Human Rights Council to shield states from criticism, except
criticism of Israel. For example, when independent experts reported violations of human rights in the
2006 Lebanon War, "state after state from the OIC took the floor to denounce the experts for daring to look beyond Israeli violations to discuss
Hezbollah's as well. OIC demands that the council "should work cooperatively with abusive governments rather than condemn them." HRW responded that this works with those who are willing to cooperate; others exploit the passivity. OIC has been criticised for failing to discuss the treatment of ethnic minorities within member countries, such as the oppression of the
Kurds in Syria and
Turkey, the
Ahwaz in
Iran, the
Hazaras in
Afghanistan, the '
Al-Akhdam' in
Yemen, or the
Berbers in
Algeria. Along with OIC's 2008 charter revisions, the member states created the Independent Permanent Human Rights Commission (IPHRC). The IPHRC is an advisory body, independent from OIC, composed of eighteen individuals from diverse educational and professional backgrounds. IPHRC has the power to monitor human rights within the member states and facilitates the integration of human rights into all OIC mandates. IPHRC also aids in the promotion of political, civil, and economic rights in all member states. In September 2017, the Independent Human Rights Commission (IPHRC) of the OIC strongly condemned the
human rights violations against the
Rohingya Muslims in
Myanmar. In December 2018, the OIC tentatively raised the issue of
China's
Xinjiang internment camps and
human rights abuses against the Uyghurs. The OIC reversed its position after a visit to Xinjiang, and in March 2019, the OIC issued a report on human rights for Muslim minorities that praised China for "providing care to its Muslim citizens" and looked forward to greater cooperation with the PRC. In December 2020 a coalition of American Muslim groups criticised OIC for failing to speak up to prevent the
abuse of the Uyghurs and accused member states of being influenced by Chinese power. The groups included the
Council on American-Islamic Relations.
LGBT rights In March 2012, the
United Nations Human Rights Council held its first discussion of
discrimination based on
sexual orientation and gender identity, following the 2011 passage of a resolution supporting
LGBT rights proposed by the
Republic of South Africa. Pakistan's representative addressed the session on behalf of the OIC, denouncing the discussion and questioning the concept of sexual orientation, which he said promoted "licentious behaviour ... against the fundamental teachings of various religions, including Islam". He stated that the council should not discuss the topic again. Most Arab countries and some African countries walked out of the session. Nonetheless, OIC members
Albania,
Gabon,
Guinea-Bissau,
Suriname and
Sierra Leone signed
a 2011 UN declaration supporting LGBT rights in the General Assembly.
Bahrain,
Iraq,
Jordan and
Turkey legalised homosexuality. In May 2016, 57 countries including
Egypt,
Iran,
Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates from the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation requested the removal of
LGBT associations from
2016 High Level Meeting on Ending AIDS, sparking protests by the
United States,
Canada, the
European Union and
LGBT communities.
Science and technology Astana Declaration The Astana Declaration is a policy guidance adopted by OIC members at the Astana Summit. The Astana Declaration commits members to increase investment in science and technology, education, eradicate extreme poverty, and implement UN
Sustainable Development Goals.
Non-state terrorism In 1999, OIC adopted the OIC Convention on Combatting International Terrorism. Human Rights Watch reported that the definition of terrorism in article 1 describes "any act or threat of violence carried out with the aim of, among other things, imperiling people’s honour, occupying or seizing public or private property, or threatening the stability, territorial integrity, political unity or sovereignty of a state." HRW described this as vague, ill-defined, and including much that is outside the generally accepted concept of terrorism. In HRW's view, it labels, or could easily be used to label, as terrorist actions, acts of peaceful expression, association, and assembly. Legal scholar
Ben Saul argued that the definition is subjective and ambiguous and concluded that it left a "serious danger of the abusive use of terrorist prosecutions against political opponents" and others. HRW is concerned by OIC's apparent unwillingness to recognise as terrorism acts that serve causes endorsed by their member states. Article 2 reads: "Peoples' struggle including armed struggle against foreign occupation, aggression, colonialism, and hegemony, aimed at liberation and self-determination." HRW suggested that OIC embrace "longstanding and universally recognised international human rights standards", At the 34th Islamic Conference of Foreign Ministers (ICFM), an OIC section, in May 2007, the foreign ministers termed
Islamophobia "the worst form of terrorism".
Dispute with Thailand Thailand responded to OIC criticism of human rights abuses in the
Muslim majority provinces of
Pattani,
Yala, and
Narathiwat in the south of the country. In a statement issued on 18 October 2005, secretary-general
Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu vocalised concern over the continuing conflict in the south that "claimed the lives of innocent people and forced the migration of local people out of their places". He stressed that the Thai government's security approach to the crisis would aggravate the situation and lead to continued violence. On 18–19 April 2009, exiled Patani leader Abu Yasir Fikri was invited to the OIC to speak about the conflict and present a proposal to end the violence between the Thai government and the ethnically Malay Muslims living in the neglected south. The group has been struggling against Thai assimilation policy and for self governance since the area was annexed by Thailand in 1902. Fikri presented a six-point solution at the conference that included obtaining the same basic rights as other groups when it came to rights of language, religion, and culture. He suggested that Thailand give up its discriminatory policies against the Patani people and allow Patani to at least be allowed the same self-governing rights as other regions in Thailand, citing that this does not go against the Thai constitution since it had been done in other parts of Thailand. He criticised the Thai government's escalation of violence by arming and creating Buddhist
militia groups and questioned their intentions. He added that Thai policies of not investigating corruption, murder, and human rights violations perpetrated by Bangkok-led administration and military personnel was an obstacle for achieving peace and healing the deep wounds of "third-class" citizens. Thai
foreign minister Kantathi Suphamongkhon said in response: "We have made it clear to the OIC several times that the violence in the deep South is not caused by religious conflict and the government grants protection to all of our citizens no matter what religion they embrace." The Foreign Ministry issued a statement dismissing the OIC's criticism and accusing it of disseminating misperceptions and misinformation about the situation in the southern provinces. "If the OIC secretariat really wants to promote the cause of peace and harmony in the three southern provinces of Thailand, the responsibility falls on the OIC secretariat to strongly condemn the militants, who are perpetrating these acts of violence against both Thai Muslims and Thai Buddhists." HRW and Amnesty International offsered the same concerns as OIC, rebuffing Thailand's attempts to dismiss the issue. == Notable meetings ==