As part of my government role at USCIRF, we monitor 29 countries under the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998. Alarms have been sounding in India in the last few years. The trend line is deeply disturbing. This is one area that everyone needs to be focused on. As discussed earlier, much of the rhetoric, the hatred, racism, Islamophobia is actually quietly promoted by the government officials. It's not a state policy, but very subtle. We've seen this in China and India. We're seeing it elsewhere.
One significant problem that we all have to think about and deal with is that in the last 10 years, the international community has experienced at least three known genocides, starting with the Yazidis, the Rohingyas and then the Muslim Uighurs in China. I'm afraid that the Muslim population in India might be meeting a similar type of fate.
There are more than 150 countries, state parties, to the Genocide Convention. In response to the Uighur genocide, there have only been eight countries and parliaments that have recognized it. So the rest of the world, the rest of the state parties to this important legal tool or mechanism, are still sleeping at the switch, if not wilfully ignoring this. They're failing to fulfill their treaty obligation.
If you don't act, if you don't show leadership, the bad actors will be getting bad ideas and encouragement, and will be emboldened. We see this repeatedly everywhere around the world. The human rights and religious freedom policy positions should be a key component of our foreign policy approaches, otherwise we'll end up dealing with a humanitarian disaster and national security threats.