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F18News Summary: Kazakhstan; Nagorno-Karabakh; Turkmenistan;Uzbekist

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  • F18News Summary: Kazakhstan; Nagorno-Karabakh; Turkmenistan;Uzbekist

    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 July 2005
    KAZAKHSTAN: UNREGISTERED RELIGIOUS ACTIVITY NOW BANNED, MISSIONARY
    ACTIVITY RESTRICTED
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=608
    New national security amendments signed by President Nursultan Nazarbayev
    on 8 July have brought in tight new restrictions on religious activity
    that violate Kazakhstan's international human rights commitments. All
    unregistered religious activity is now illegal and those leading or taking
    part in unregistered religious meetings can be fined. Missionary activity
    by local people and foreigners is illegal unless missionaries are from a
    registered religious organisation and have individual registration from
    the authorities of the local area where they operate. Literature for use
    by missionaries requires prior censorship from local authorities. The OSCE
    had urged that the ban on unregistered religious activity should be
    excluded from the law. "Unfortunately this was not done," an official of
    the OSCE mission in Almaty told Forum 18 News Service. The OSCE is
    preparing a detailed critique of the "overly restrictive" new law.
    * See full article below. *


    13 July 2005
    NAGORNO-KARABAKH: SUSPENDED SENTENCE FOR EMBATTLED BAPTIST CONSCRIPT
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=605
    Embattled Baptist conscript Gagik Mirzoyan received a two-year sentence,
    suspended for one year, at his 7 July trial. He had refused to swear the
    military oath or serve with weapons since being called up into the army of
    the unrecognised republic of Nagorno-Karabakh in the South Caucasus. "This
    means he won't have to serve any time in prison - if of course he does
    nothing wrong over the next year," Albert Voskanyan of the local Centre
    for Civilian Initiatives told Forum 18 News Service. Beaten twice since
    his conscription last December, Mirzoyan spent 10 days in prison for
    preaching his faith in his army unit. "After a lot of pressure, Gagik was
    finally happy because he could see his brothers and sisters from the
    church at his trial," a Baptist told Forum 18.


    11 July 2005
    TURKMENISTAN: PRESIDENT ATTEMPTS TO MEDDLE IN ORTHODOX STRUCTURES
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=603
    Russian Orthodox Patriarch Aleksi II has politely sidelined Turkmen
    President Saparmurat Niyazov's attempt to split the dozen or so Russian
    Orthodox parishes in Turkmenistan away from the Central Asian diocese, and
    subordinate them directly to the Patriarch. A Moscow-based priest familiar
    with the situation, who preferred not to be identified, insisted to Forum
    18 News Service that the Church itself has to make such decisions, not the
    state. The priest told Forum 18 that he believes President Niyazov "wants
    the Orthodox Church to exist, but a Church that is in his hand, just as he
    has done with Islam." Stressing that the Moscow Patriarchate is keen to see
    an end to the tensions between the Church and the Turkmen government, the
    priest deplored the denial of visas to three or four priests who the
    diocese wished to send to serve in Turkmenistan, and the refusal of the
    Turkmen government so far to re-register Russian Orthodox parishes.


    11 July 2005
    UZBEKISTAN: COURT CONFIRMS ALL PROTESTANTS BANNED IN NORTH-WEST
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=602
    The last legal Protestant church in north-western Uzbekistan has had its
    appeal against a regional Justice Ministry ban turned down in court, Forum
    18 News Service has learnt. All Protestant activities in north-west
    Uzbekistan are now banned after a Nukus court rejected the Emmanuel Full
    Gospel Church's appeal. Separately, another example of official condoning
    of kangaroo courts staged by local residents against Muslim-born converts
    to other faiths has come to light. An Uzbek Protestant, who preferred to
    be anonymous, told Forum 18 of the case of Daniyara Ibaidulayev, a
    Protestant convert who was on 29 June beaten up by his brother and another
    villager, who cut his lips with a knife, telling him he must return to
    Islam. The district public prosecutor's office told Ibaidulayev that "his
    problems would cease as soon as he returned to Islam". Also, a Hare
    Krishna devotee has been threatened with losing her job as a
    schoolteacher, if she does not stop sharing her beliefs.


    12 July 2005
    UZBEKISTAN: POLICE CONTINUE HUNT FOR RELIGIOUS LITERATURE
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=604
    Police and secret police continue to hunt down religious literature in
    Uzbekistan, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. Latest seizures include 15
    Bibles from the home of Protestant pastor Viktor Klimov in Gulistan on 17
    June, 90 Hare Krishna books seized by police and secret police from a
    devotee in Bostan on 16 June. Five Protestants in Kungrad were officially
    warned on 1 June, after bringing religious literature into the country. An
    official of the government~Rs Religious Affairs Committee has defended such
    seizures, telling Forum 18 that "the police did have the right to seize
    Klimov~Rs Bibles temporarily, but they then had to send the books to us for
    analysis, and we of course will conclude that these books (in other words,
    the Bibles) are not banned in Uzbekistan," Begzot Kadyrov stated. Such
    censorship of and restrictions on religious literature violate
    Uzbekistan~Rs international commitments to freedom of expression and
    freedom of religion.


    14 July 2005
    UZBEKISTAN: NO PROGRESS FOR ARRESTED PENTECOSTAL
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=606
    Pentecostal Kural Bekjanov is still being held at a police station in the
    capital Tashkent with no progress on the investigation into whether he was
    connected to the murder of a US citizen in the city. "We are convinced of
    his innocence, and our suspicion is that his religious beliefs are the
    reason for his ordeal," Iskander Najafov, a lawyer for the Full Gospel
    Church, told Forum 18 News Service. But Shukhrat Ismailov of the
    government's religious affairs committee denied this, telling Forum 18
    church members' claims were "pure speculation". Since his arrest on 14
    June, Bekjanov has been tortured by police and cell mates trying to force
    him to abandon his Christian faith. Meanwhile two Jehovah's Witnesses in
    Karshi who have already been fined for "illegal" religious activity now
    face criminal charges with penalties of up to three years' imprisonment.


    14 July 2005
    VIETNAM: THREE FUNDAMENTAL CAUSES OF PERSECUTION REMAIN
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=607
    Despite three new legal documents on religion since last November,
    government harassment of religious communities has not eased. Prison
    sentences on Mennonite pastor Nguyen Hong Quang and a colleague were
    confirmed in April, two Hoa Hao Buddhists were given prison sentences and
    massive fines the same month for distributing the teachings of their
    movement's founder, while Hmong Protestants in the north-west were beaten
    by local officials and had their properties confiscated in May. The
    Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam and numerous Protestant churches remain
    outlawed. A comparison of the situation five years ago and today shows no
    change in the fundamental causes of persecution: the restrictions on
    unregistered religious activity, the interference in the activity of
    registered religious communities and the lack of a transparent line of
    command from the central government to local officials which allows local
    violations to continue. If religious freedom is to improve, these three
    causes of persecution will be crucial benchmarks of change.


    15 July 2005
    KAZAKHSTAN: UNREGISTERED RELIGIOUS ACTIVITY NOW BANNED, MISSIONARY
    ACTIVITY RESTRICTED

    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=608
    By Igor Rotar, Central Asia Correspondent, Forum 18 News Service

    In defiance of its international human rights commitments, Kazakhstan has
    banned all unregistered religious activity and introduced fines for
    leaders and participants in such activity, Forum 18 News Service reports.
    It has also restricted missionary activity to licensed missionaries only
    whose literature requires prior censorship, with fines - and, for foreign
    nationals, deportation - for those who violate the restrictions. The
    controversial changes to the religion law - which echo those taken in
    neighbouring Uzbekistan in 1998 - came in the sweeping new law introducing
    changes and amendments to legislation relating to the provision of national
    security, approved by parliament on 29 June and signed on 8 July by
    Kazakhstan's president Nursultan Nazarbayev. The law came into force on
    its publication in Kazakh-language newspapers on 13 July and in
    Russian-language newspapers on 14 July.

    Under scrutiny in both houses of parliament since February, the law has
    prompted strong criticism from international and local human rights
    organisations, including the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE). Given the widespread criticism, it is possible the Kazakh
    authorities timed the announcement that they would not be deporting
    high-profile asylum-seeker and eye-witness of the Andijan massacre
    Lutfullo Shamsudinov back to his native Uzbekistan as a way to distract
    attention from the announcement that the president had signed the law.

    An official of the OSCE office in Almaty, who preferred not to be named,
    told Forum 18 on 14 July that the organisation's Office for Democratic
    Institutions and Human Rights in Warsaw was preparing a detailed critique
    of the "overly restrictive nature" of the new law which would shortly be
    published.

    The adoption of these sweeping restrictions on religious communities,
    political parties, the media and non-governmental organisations - which
    came as the OSCE was holding a conference in Vienna on how to protect
    human rights in the fight against terrorism - will kill off any lingering
    hopes Kazakhstan might have had to become OSCE Chairman-in-Office in 2009.

    The new law amends a range of other laws and codes, including the Civil
    Procedure Code, the Criminal Code, the Criminal Procedures code, the Code
    of Administrative Offences and the laws on freedom of religion and of
    religious associations, operational investigative activity, the media,
    non-commercial organisations and political parties.

    Although Muslims and the Russian Orthodox have broadly supported the law,
    other smaller religious communities have been highly concerned (see
    F18News 13 May 2005 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=561 ).
    Particularly worried have been the Council of Churches Baptists, who
    reject registration in principle in all the former Soviet republics where
    they operate. One church member told Forum 18 on 13 July that
    congregations in Kazakhstan have written numerous appeals to President
    Nazarbayev and other officials in recent months calling on them not to
    adopt the new law. They point out that even when registration was not
    compulsory, their pastors have been fined for leading unregistered
    communities.

    Article 4 of the amended religion law has a new fourth section that
    forbids the activity of unregistered religious organisations. A new
    article, 4-1, requires all citizens and foreigners engaged in missionary
    activity to register before they conduct such activity. The article
    specifically bans all missionary activity by any individual who does not
    have such registration.

    A new article, 4-2, sets out the way missionaries register with the local
    authorities annually: the potential missionary has to present the local
    authorities with proof that they represent a registered religious
    organisation which has specifically engaged them to do missionary activity
    in the local area and all literature, video and other materials that the
    missionary intends to use for local officials to censor. Any new materials
    to be used after the missionary already has registration also have to be
    submitted to the local authorities for censorship.

    A new article, 10-1, bans all activity by religious organisations whose
    activities have been suspended or banned by a court.

    The new law also made corresponding changes to the code of administrative
    offences, adding a new article, 374-1, to punish "leadership of and
    participation in the activity of public and religious associations that
    have not been registered in accordance with the law of the Republic of
    Kazakhstan, as well as financing their activity". Under this article:

    - The leadership of the activity of public and religious associations that
    have not been registered in the proper manner, and also those organisations
    whose activity has been halted or banned will attract a fine amounting to
    100 times the minimum monthly wage, currently 971 Tenge [47 Norwegian
    Kroner, 6 Euros, or 7 US Dollars].

    - Participation in the activity of public and religious associations that
    have not been registered in the proper manner and also those organisations
    whose activity has been halted or banned will attract a fine amounting to
    50 times the minimum monthly wage.

    - The financing of the activity of public and religious associations that
    have not been registered in the proper manner and also those organisations
    whose activity has been halted or banned will attract a fine amounting to
    200 times the minimum monthly wage.

    Additions have also been adopted to Article 375 of the administrative
    code, an article that already punishes violations of the religion law
    (including refusal to register a religious organisation). According to the
    new addition, "Missionary work carried out by citizens, foreign citizens
    and persons who have no citizenship, without the appropriate registration,
    will attract a fine of up to 15 times the monthly wage of a citizen, while
    foreigners and persons without citizenship will be fined up to 15 times
    the monthly wage and will be expelled beyond the borders of the Republic
    of Kazakhstan."

    Article 375 also now punishes leaders of religious organisations that
    break any law with fines of up to thirty times the minimum monthly wage,
    while the organisations themselves can be fined up to 200 times the
    minimum monthly wage and banned for up to six months. Religious
    organisations that "systematically carry out activity in defiance of their
    statute" or refuse to stop activities that led to their being suspended
    face fines of up to 300 times the minimum monthly wage and a total ban on
    their activities, while leaders of such organisations can be fined up to
    40 times the minimum monthly wage.

    The OSCE official told Forum 18 that the organisation had recommended that
    the religion law amendment banning unregistered religious activity should
    be excluded. "Unfortunately this was not done," the official declared. "We
    reckon that the parliamentary deputies only took on board one of our
    recommendations, excluding the amendment that would have granted the
    prosecutor's office the right to halt the activity of media outlets,
    political parties and religious organisations before a court decision had
    been reached."

    One activist who has been involved in lobbying parliament during the
    adoption process takes some comfort from the exclusion of a few of the
    harshest measures in earlier drafts. Aleksandr Klyushev, head of the
    Association of Religious Organisations of Kazakhstan, pointed out that the
    definition of missionary activity has been changed. In the initial draft
    law, missionary activity was defined as "promoting a faith by means of
    religious proselytising activity".

    "Effectively, every individual believer fell into this definition," he
    told Forum 18 on 14 July. "But we have managed to ensure that missionary
    activity is defined in the law as teaching and promoting a religion by
    means of religious proselytising preaching which is not included in the
    statute of a religious organisation that is active in Kazakhstan."
    Klyushev hopes that it will not now be possible to see representatives of
    any faith as missionaries, even if they have just one registered group in
    Kazakhstan.

    Klyushev also voiced some satisfaction that although the initial amendment
    to Article 5 of the religion law stated that "the religious education of a
    child must not harm his all-round development or physical and moral
    health", pressure from religious believers has ensured that the term
    "all-round development" has been omitted. "The phrase 'all-round
    development' could be applied very widely, even, for example, to an
    atheist education, and so we are very pleased we have managed to exclude
    it."

    At the same time, Klyushev declared himself extremely dissatisfied at the
    introduction of Article 374-1 of the Administrative code and the
    amendments to Article 375 of the Administrative code. "Even before
    Nursultan Nazarbayev signed this law, local officials started treating it
    as already effective and started persecuting Protestants on the basis of
    the changes to the Administrative Code," he told Forum 18 (see F18News 30
    May 2005 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=572 ).

    The authorities have long sought to restrict religious rights by
    tightening the 1992 religion law. A harsh new law was adopted by
    parliament in 2002 (the eighth such attempt) and approved by President
    Nazarbayev. However, under pressure from international and local human
    rights organisations, the constitutional council ruled in April 2002 that
    the new law contradicted the constitution and it was withdrawn.

    For a personal commentary on the legal moves to seriously restrict
    religious freedom in Kazakhstan under the guise of "national security",
    see F18News http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=564

    For more background, see Forum 18's Kazakhstan religious freedom survey at
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=249

    A printer-friendly map of Kazakhstan is available at
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/at las/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=kazakh
    (END )

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855
    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/

    --Boundary_(ID_mCjWTnLiJ/kbCUEcMFamAw)--
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