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F18News Summary: Laos; Russia; Uzbekistan

FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway http://www.forum18.org/

The right to believe, to worship and witness The right to change one’s belief or religion The right to join together and express one’s belief

15 June 2004 LAOS: THE DISTURBING PROSPECT FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=340 The religious freedom picture in Laos is complex, not least due to non-religious factors such as ethnicity, and the state’s opposition to freedom of information. However, it does appear that religious freedom conditions have improved in the last few years. But the central government’s political agenda remains fundamentally hostile to religious freedom, despite government claims that religious freedom violations are caused by an alleged inability to control local officials. This hostility as manifested in “isolated” incidents of religious freedom violations – against Protestants, Buddhists, Animists, Baha’is, Muslims and Catholics – seems set to continue.

16 June 2004 RUSSIA: FOREIGN MISSIONARIES IN SAKHALIN FACE RESTRICTIONS http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=342 Russian Orthodox Deacon Andrei Khvylya-Olinter recently claimed on a Sakhalin radio programme that 70 per cent of the island’s economy is in the hands of “sectarian structures”, and warned of “involvement in intelligence gathering of foreign so-called pastors.” Judging by local state support for a recent conference devoted to “Spiritual Security” and the tightening of religious work visa restrictions encountered by local Protestants and Catholics, who Forum 18 News Service has met, it appears that the regional authorities share his concerns.

16 June 2004 RUSSIA: DO FOREIGN MISSIONARIES BEAR “THE HALLMARKS OF ESPIONAGE” IN KHABAROVSK REGION? http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=343 Local Orthodox in Khabarovsk share the concerns of Orthodox in Sakhalin region about foreign missionaries, complaining to Forum 18 News Service of “espionage” and “Catholic expansion”. However, throughout most of Khabarovsk region, Baptists, Catholics, and members of the New Apostolic Church have told Forum 18 that they have not recently encountered problems regarding access or visas for foreign missionaries. One exception appears to be access by foreign religious personnel to closed cities, which is reportedly very difficult to obtain, even though US citizens are employed at a military facility in one such city. This issue particularly affects Catholics, as the majority of Catholic priests in Russia are foreigners. One anonymous Protestant source has also told Forum 18 that it is now practically impossible for foreign citizens to conduct informal religious work in the Russian Far East.

17 June 2004 RUSSIA: JEHOVAH’S WITNESS BAN COMES INTO EFFECT http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=344 A ban on all organised activity by some 10,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses in the city of Moscow went into force yesterday (16 June) with the failure of a court appeal by the community. This is the first time that a religious organisation has been banned outright under Russia’s 1997 religion law. One of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ lawyers told Forum 18 News Service outside the courtroom that all hope of overturning the ban now lies with the European Court of Human Rights. While the prosecution claims that the Moscow Jehovah’s Witness community may continue to function without registration, the ban states clearly that all of its activity must cease, and Jehovah’s Witness lawyer John Burns told Forum 18 that this prosecution claim was “like saying that you can be Catholic but you can’t have a church – you can hold a belief but you can’t do anything about it.” Other regions of Russia may well try to copy the Moscow decision. * See full article below. *

15 June 2004 UZBEKISTAN: THREATS AGAINST LAWYER’S WIFE AND YOUNG CHILDREN http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=341 It is believed that the Uzbek authorities are behind anonymous night-time telephone calls and continuing threats being made against the wife and young children of Rustam Satdanov, a lawyer forced to flee Uzbekistan and seek political asylum in the USA for his work defending Jehovah’s Witnesses. Satdanov received political asylum on 11 May. His wife, Asiya Satdanova, and their young children, who are still in Tashkent, told Forum 18 News Service that they are being anonymously threatened with “serious difficulties” if Satdanov does not return immediately to Uzbekistan. He himself told Forum 18 that if he returns the authorities would, using fabricated criminal charges, punish him for defending religious believers.

17 June 2004 RUSSIA: JEHOVAH’S WITNESS BAN COMES INTO EFFECT

http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=344 By Geraldine Fagan, Moscow Correspondent, Forum 18 News Service

With the coming into effect yesterday of a ban on the organised activity of some 10,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses in the city of Moscow, their hopes now rest upon the European Court of Human Rights, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. On 16 June Moscow City Court rejected the religious organisation’s appeal against a 26 March lower court decision stripping its legal status and prohibiting its activity in the Russian capital. While the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ appeal was still pending, that verdict was not in force (see F18News 29 March http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=289).

Speaking to Forum 18 outside the courtroom on 16 June, Jehovah’s Witnesses lawyer John Burns said that the European Court would now consider whether the ruling violates the European Convention on Human Rights, to which Russia is a signatory. During the appeal hearing, Burns argued that the ban clearly breaches the Convention’s specific guarantees of religious freedom, freedom of association and non-discrimination on religious grounds. Should the European Court indeed find the Moscow Court in violation of the Convention, Burns told Forum 18, Russia will be obliged to reverse the ban on the Jehovah’s Witness community or else face penalties ranging from a minimum fine of several thousand Euros to expulsion from the Council of Europe, “although that is not very likely.”

Following a six-year trial, the ban on the Moscow Jehovah’s Witness community marks the first successful attempt to outlaw the activity of a religious organisation under Russia’s 1997 law on religion. Notwithstanding a 2001 verdict in the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ favour, Moscow courts have found the community guilty of forcing families to disintegrate, infringing the person, rights and freedoms of the citizen, encouraging suicide or the refusal on religious grounds of medical aid to the critically ill, and inciting citizens to refuse to fulfil their civil obligations established by law. Under Article 14 of the 1997 law, a religious organisation may lose its legal status and have its activity banned on these grounds (see F18News 25 May http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=327 ).

For most of yesterday’s four-hour hearing, the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ three lawyers outlined how the lower court had failed to provide evidence of the allegations against the community in the form required by a court of law, i.e. previous administrative or criminal convictions of named individuals belonging to the organisation. This absence of such evidence was reminiscent of Soviet-era trials against Jehovah’s Witnesses in the view of one lawyer, Artur Leontyev. John Burns pointed out that the only legal conviction cited in the lower court’s decision – the prosecution of a Muscovite who physically assaulted a female Jehovah’s Witness as she tried to give him religious literature – was even used to demonstrate the consequences of the organisation’s disregard for citizens’ right to privacy: “This is a licence for brutality on the basis of bigotry.” (For more on the contents of this verdict, see see F18News 25 May http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=328 ).

The Jehovah’s Witnesses’ third lawyer, Galina Krylova, maintained that the lower court had been entirely selective in its use of evidence, specifically by ignoring extensive expert testimony favourable to the Jehovah’s Witnesses, such as confirmation by the Russian Ministry of Health of the existence of perfectly acceptable medical alternatives to blood transfusions. In her view, this was because the court’s decision was “ideologically – maybe even politically – predetermined.” She added that Russian law permits citizens to refuse both medical treatment and military service.

John Burns also pointed out to the court that the experts whose analyses were cited in the lower court verdict had acknowledged that they had never attended a Jehovah’s Witness meeting. Comparing the Moscow religious community to a village, he suggested that the seven non-Jehovah’s Witnesses who testified that the organisation had broken up their families were like seven relatives living outside this village while being involved in family disputes with several of its inhabitants. “Would you liquidate the entire village on the basis of what those seven told you, as well as the conclusion of a few experts who had never lived there?” he asked the three judges. “Well, that’s what the lower court judge did.” Burns also cited several European Court judgements protecting Jehovah’s Witnesses’ rights and recalled that Russia’s Supreme Court has twice ordered lower courts to implement European Court decisions.

Representing the public prosecutor’s office of Moscow’s northern district, Tatyana Kondratyeva responded to the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ lawyers by acknowledging that “illegal methods were used to influence thought and convictions” in the Soviet Union, but added that the repression of Jehovah’s Witnesses during that period had never been one of the prosecution’s arguments. She called upon the court to reject the conclusions of “foreign lawyers and experts”, as well as decisions by the European Court, since these “are not even indirectly related to the subject of this case.” Dismissing as biased the expert analyses “correctly” rejected by the lower court, Kondratyeva insisted that the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ activity – rather than doctrine – had been under scrutiny and questioned how anyone could not see its negative consequences: “Isn’t damage to physical and psychological health negative?”

In support of Kondratyeva’s arguments to uphold the ban, a representative of Moscow City public prosecutor’s office commented that the Jehovah’s Witnesses reject alternative as well as military service “as far as I know”. She also noted that Jehovah’s Witnesses keep their children away from state programmes aimed at encouraging patriotism at an early age. “And why should I find literature in my letterbox which I never asked for?” this official concluded. “Why do people come up to me on the street? Certain citizens’ rights are violated by that!”

As there is no precedent for such a ban under current Russian law, it is not yet clear exactly how it will be enforced. Remarking that it would be easy to close a bank account and destroy an official stamp, Galina Krylova queried how the authorities would stop organised activity: “Will the police check up to see whether or not Jehovah’s Witnesses are celebrating their birthdays?” Tatyana Kondratyeva maintained that there was no legal obstacle to prevent the community from reforming as an unregistered religious group, even though the ban states clearly that the Moscow organisation of Jehovah’s Witnesses is to terminate its activity in addition to losing its legal status. John Burns told Forum 18 that he did not find Kondratyeva’s suggestion credible in view of the nature of the ban: “It’s like saying that you can be Catholic but you can’t have a church – you can hold a belief but you can’t do anything about it.” Forum 18 notes that the official commentary to Article 14 of the 1997 religion law refers to prosecution according to Article 239 of the Criminal Code, which punishes the participation in an organisation found to have violated the person and rights of the citizen with penalities ranging from a fine of 100 times the minimum wage (14,670 Norwegian kroner, 1,743 Euros or 2,107 US dollars) to imprisonment for up to two years.

While John Burns told Forum 18 that the Moscow Jehovah’s Witness community hosted a stadium congress attended by some 21,000 believers “without incident” as recently 11-13 June, the 26 March lower court decision has already had negative repercussions outside Moscow. Even when technically not in force, it was reportedly used to justify the cancellation of local congregations’ rental contracts in several cities (see F18News 13 April http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=297) and cited among the grounds for dismissal of three Jehovah’s Witness employees on the Pacific island of Sakhalin (see F18News 4 May http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=312 ). It thus appears highly likely that the ban’s negative consequences for Jehovah’s Witnesses will increase across Russia following the latest Moscow court decision.

For more background information see Forum 18’s latest religious freedom survey at http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=116

A printer-friendly map of Russia is available at

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=europe&Rootmap=russi (END)

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