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Karabakh Faiths Decry State Controls

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  • Karabakh Faiths Decry State Controls

    KARABAKH FAITHS DECRY STATE CONTROLS
    By Lusine Musaelian

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    Feb 13 2009
    UK

    Minority religions protest over new law that puts them under
    supervision of authorities.

    Fears the Nagorny-Karabakh authorities are trying to restrict freedom
    of worship have been raised by a new law forcing religious groups to
    get approval from the authorities before they can invite colleagues
    to the self-declared republic.

    Officials justified the legislation, which was adopted in November last
    year, by citing concerns over national security, but smaller religious
    communities like the Jehovah's Witnesses have been struggling to come
    to terms with its demands.

    Under the provisions of the law, religions have to ask the government's
    department for religions and national minorities for permission to
    invite visitors such as foreign preachers.

    "This means that the representative of a religious organisation has
    to appeal to our organisation in advance and tell us, for example,
    that someone is going to a seminar or a meeting. They can only invite
    their guests via us," said Asot Sarkisian, head of the department.

    The smaller faiths say this is unfair, since the Armenian Apostolic
    Church, which counts the overwhelming majority of Karabakh's 140,000
    residents among its flock, is exempt from the legislation.

    "Such measures restrict the rights of religious organisations. They
    amount to state censorship," said Araik Khachatrian, a Jehovah's
    Witness.

    He said the law also restricted the rights of communities to rent
    halls for meetings, saying they could only do so if the government
    department approved.

    And other faiths have also felt oppressed by the law. Levon Sardarian,
    the dean of the small Fire of Awakening church, a Christian group with
    350 members that has been active in Nagorny-Karabakh for a decade,
    said under the law their activities also had to be assessed by a
    state official.

    "The number of restrictions can rise or fall depending on how
    [officials] relate to the particular organisation in question,"
    said Sardarian.

    Aren Baghdasarian, representative of the small Baptist Evangelical
    Church, agreed.

    "We live in a free, independent country. If visits by my brothers
    in faith could help our work, then we must do it, and no one has the
    right to interfere," he said.

    Karabakh, which is an unrecognised republic ruled by Armenians,
    has been largely peaceful since 1994, when a ceasefire was signed
    with Baku.

    But Sarkisian, of the government's religion department, said it was
    important to remember that a peace deal had still not been signed,
    and that preserving national unity was important.

    "We often forget that we live in a state of war. Therefore the
    religious organisations have to account for the arrival and departure
    of people they invite. Besides the activities of some religious
    organisations have not been fully investigated," he said.

    In Nagorny-Karabakh, the refusal of Jehovah's Witnesses to serve in the
    army is particularly contentious, and members of the faith have been
    imprisoned for four years for their conscientious objection. Officials
    see such opinions as undermining Karabakh's de facto independence.

    The Armenian Apostolic Church said it understood the state's concerns,
    and welcomed the new law's insistence on ensuring rival faiths did
    not undermine security.

    "It would be wonderful if the law was working fully, and all religious
    organisations trying to encroach on national security were under the
    control of the state. The main aim of the promulgation of this law is
    to restrict the work of those organisations, which oppose compulsory
    military service," said Father Hakob Andreasian.

    He said the Apostolic Church aimed to preserve the identity of the
    Armenian people whereas foreign groups had no such concerns.

    "Karabakh is unrecognised by the world community. However, every
    religious organisation, financed from external sources, opens a
    representative office in Karabakh. They exchange information, make
    studies, invite guests and so on," he said.

    Many residents of Karabakh have a similar viewpoint, though often
    they are more liberal than the church priests.

    "I am not opposed to these organisations existing in general. But
    I would prefer it if they returned to the true path," said Karen
    Galstian, a 28-year-old follower of the Apostolic Church.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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