Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

F18News: Turkmenistan - Demolition of places of worship continues

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • F18News: Turkmenistan - Demolition of places of worship continues

    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

    ========================================== ======
    Tuesday 23 May 2006
    TURKMENISTAN: DEMOLITION OF PLACES OF WORSHIP CONTINUES

    In large-scale demolition projects in Turkmenistan, those expelled from
    their home get no compensation and often nowhere to live. Amongst the
    buildings demolished are religious communities' places of worship. The
    last surviving pre-revolutionary Armenian Apostolic church and a
    family-owned Sunni mosque in the eastern port of Turkmenbashi have been
    destroyed, Forum 18 News Service has been told. Exiled human rights
    activist Vyacheslav Mamedov told Forum 18 that the mosque "was used on
    Muslim festivals and for family events like weddings, funerals and sadakas
    [commemorations of the dead]." The former Armenian church "was a very
    beautiful building," Mamedov recalled. He told Forum 18 that there is
    widespread anger and fear over the destruction of the town's historic
    centre. Amongst places of worship in Turkmenistan, known to Forum 18 to
    have been demolished in the past, are mosques, an Adventist church, and a
    Hare Krishna temple.

    TURKMENISTAN: DEMOLITION OF PLACES OF WORSHIP CONTINUES

    By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>

    The demolition of historic 19th century buildings in the central part of
    the Caspian port town of Turkmenbashi [Türkmenbashy, formerly
    Krasnovodsk], including the last surviving pre-revolutionary Armenian
    Apostolic Church in Turkmenistan, has been completed this month on the
    orders of President Saparmurat Niyazov. The authorities completed
    demolition of the church in February 2005, having previously refused to
    hand it back to the local Armenian community for worship.

    The Armenian embassy in the capital Ashgabad [Ashgabat] confirmed to Forum
    18 News Service that it had been informed about the destruction of the
    historic church in Turkmenbashi, but the ambassador Aram Grigoryan was out
    of the country on 22 May and unable to comment on the destruction. No-one
    was available for immediate comment at the Armenian Foreign Ministry in
    Yerevan on 22 May, or at the headquarters of the Armenian Apostolic Church
    in Echmiadzin near the Armenian capital.

    Also demolished amid the wholesale destruction of the century-old heart of
    Turkmenbashi, which began in 2004, was a family-owned Sunni Muslim mosque.
    Human rights activist Vyacheslav Mamedov told Forum 18 on 22 May that the
    local Etrekov family started building the mosque on their own land, near
    the Turkmenbashi Hotel, in 1993 and began using it for prayers in 2001 as
    it neared completion. "Until its demolition in July 2005, it was used on
    Muslim festivals and for family events like weddings, funerals and sadakas
    [commemorations of the dead]," Mamedov told Forum 18. He himself left
    Turkmenbashi in 2004, as the campaign was beginning, and is now a refugee
    in western Europe.

    The former Armenian church, built a century ago and consecrated by the
    then Catholicos (head of the Armenian Apostolic Church) in 1904, was
    confiscated by the Soviet authorities and turned into a warehouse. In
    1993, Mamedov - as a local journalist and human rights activist - had
    supported attempts by the local Armenian community to form a cultural and
    religious centre in the town and regain possession of the church. He said
    the authorities consistently refused to register the community or allow it
    to function. "It was a very beautiful building," Mamedov recalls. "When we
    were trying to get it back in 1993, I remember looking inside and it was
    just used as a store for the local administration's old furniture and car
    parts."

    Mamedov - who has obtained a copy of a secret local administration order
    from November 2005 detailing which streets are to be destroyed - said
    there is widespread anger and fear in Turkmenbashi over the destruction of
    the town's historic centre, reactions confirmed by the exile Turkmenistan
    Helsinki Foundation. But Mamedov said the town's main Sunni Muslim mosque
    and the Russian Orthodox church are located close together in the newer
    parts of the town and are not in immediate danger of demolition.

    In massive construction redevelopments in Ashgabad and elsewhere in
    Turkmenistan, those expelled from their homes ahead of demolition get no
    compensation and often nowhere else to live. Among places of worship
    bulldozed in Ashgabad was the Seventh-day Adventist church, built in the
    1990s and which was destroyed in 1999 at only one week's notice. The
    authorities claimed the land was needed for a road-widening programme, but
    for some years the site was derelict. The Adventists have never been given
    any compensation and are not allowed to build a new church to replace the
    one destroyed. Shortly before Ashgabad's Adventist Church was demolished,
    in August 1999 a Hare Krishna temple outside the eastern town of Mary was
    demolished.

    A mosque was among buildings in an entire settlement, Darvasa in the
    central Kara-Kum desert, which was destroyed in autumn 2004 after
    President Niyazov flew over in a helicopter and regarded the settlement as
    unattractive. Darvasa's mainly ethnic Uzbek residents were given just two
    hours to leave. One visitor to the settlement before its destruction told
    Forum 18 that the mosque had only just been completed when it was
    destroyed.

    Other mosques in Turkmenistan have also been destroyed, apparently in some
    cases for failure to honour the President Niyazov's books of alleged
    "spiritual writings" (see F18News 4 January 2005
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=481> and 19 November 2003
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=187>). (END)

    For a personal commentary by a Protestant within Turkmenistan, on the
    fiction - despite government claims - of religious freedom in the country,
    and how religious communities and the international community should
    respond to this, see <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 728>

    For more background, see Forum 18's Turkmenistan religious freedom survey
    at <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 672>

    A printer-friendly map of Turkmenistan is available at
    <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpedition s/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=turkme& gt;
    (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/
Working...
X