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  • Armenia: There can be no exemptions to the right to freedom of

    AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
    PRESS RELEASE


    AI Index: EUR 54/000/2007 (Public)
    News Service No: ?
    20 December 2007

    Embargo Date: 20 December 2007 00:01 GMT

    Armenia: There can be no exemptions to the right to freedom of
    conscience and religion

    Not Published

    People in Armenia are beaten and imprisoned because of their beliefs.
    Members of the religious organization Jehovah's Witnesses are
    increasingly becoming victms of the violation of their rights to
    freedom of conscience, Amnesty International said in a report
    published today.

    Amnesty International's report, Armenia: Fear of the freedom of
    conscience and religion: violations of the rights of Jehovah's
    Witnesses, outlines the organization's concerns regarding the
    discrimination against Jehovah's Witnesses, of whom there are an
    estimated 9,000 in the country. Central to these concerns are the
    issues of conscientious objection and reports of impunity relating to
    physical assaults on Jehovah's Witnesses.

    As a Council of Europe member Armenia has undertaken the obligation
    to provide a genuinely civilian alternative to compulsory military
    service for those whose beliefs do not allow them to take up arms.
    However, Armenia's alternative service appears to still be under the
    control of the military, making it incompatible with the pacifist
    convictions of Jehovah's Witnesses and others. As of 26 September
    2007 there were 82 Jehovah's Witnesses imprisoned as conscientious
    objectors in Armenia.

    "Young male Jehovah's Witnesses continue to be imprisoned in ever
    larger numbers and for longer periods because their beliefs prohibit
    them from performing military service. Since there is no genuinely
    civilian alternative service in Armenia at present, Amnesty
    International considers them prisoners of conscience and calls for
    their immediate and unconditional release," said Laurence Broers,
    Amnesty International's researcher on Armenia.

    "All those wrongly imprisoned must receive adequate compensation and
    the Armenian authorities must ensure they suffer no further human
    rights violations through the denial of documentation necessary for
    them to enjoy full rights as civilians - including the securing
    passports and visas, entry into public sector employment or
    marriage."

    As the Jehovah's Witnesses have increased their activities after
    registration as a religious organization in 2004 hostility against
    them has also seemingly increased, taking the form of physical
    assaults. Amnesty International is concerned that the reported
    failure of the police to investigate and, where appropriate,
    prosecute physical assaults sends the signal that assaults and wider
    discrimination are permissible.

    "There is a pattern of physical assaults on Jehovah's Witnesses,
    including by representatives of the Armenian Apostolic Church. We are
    concerned that the Armenian authorities are failing to consider that
    Jehovah's Witnesses are being specifically targeted and therefore
    discriminated against. Acknowledging the discriminatory aspect to
    these assaults is a necessary step toward countering discrimination
    and impunity," said Laurence Broers.


    Amnesty International urges the Armenian authorities to:
    - introduce a genuinely civilian and non-punitive alternative to
    compulsory military service;
    - ensure through the investigation of prosecution of physical attacks
    that there is no impunity with regard to physical assaults against
    Jehovah's Witnesses;
    - ensure that the Jehovah's Witnesses and other registered religious
    groups can exercise their rights without discrimination or hindrance.

    Background
    Jehovah's Witnesses have been active in Armenia since 1975. They
    first requested legal registration as a religious organization in
    1995 and after some 15 rejections, they were finally registered in
    2004.

    Aspects of the organization's activities in Armenia have become a
    source of friction with the Armenian Apostolic Church, the leading
    religious denomination in the country. Some 90 per cent of the
    population are members, at least formally, of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church.

    The Constitution as amended by referendum in 2005 recognizes `the
    exclusive historical mission of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church as
    a national church...', while the 1991 Law on Freedom of Conscience
    and Religious Organizations grants the Armenian Apostolic Church
    official status as the national church. Human rights activists have
    expressed concern that other religious denominations do not enjoy the
    same rights and privileges as the Armenian Apostolic Church.


    Public Document
    ****************************************
    For more information please call Amnesty International's press office
    in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
    Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW. web:
    http://www.amnesty.org

    For latest human rights news view http://news.amnesty.org

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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