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  • F18News Summary: Uzbekistan; COMMENTARY;

    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

    ========================================== =======

    18 November 2009
    UZBEKISTAN: REPRESSION OF MUSLIM AND CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS ACTIVITY
    CONTINUES
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive. php?article_id=1376
    Mekhrinisso Hamdamova, a Muslim holding a state appointment, has been
    arrested for holding unauthorised religious meetings in her home, Forum 18
    News Service has learned. She faces very serious charges, the authorities
    claiming that she was attempting to overthrow the President and the
    "constitutional order", and inciting religious hatred. Over 30 of her
    family and others have been arrested, human rights defender Surat Ikramov
    told Forum 18. The official overseeing religious issues in Hamdamova's city
    told Forum 18 "probably she did something unlawful so she was arrested." 11
    Protestants have been fined because they were together for a meal in a
    friend's house, the fines ranging between 50 and 10 times the minimum
    monthly wage. Similarly 17 Protestants have been fined for possessing
    "illegal" religious literature. The judge in the latter case, asked why he
    ordered a copy of the New Testament in Uzbek and other literature to be
    destroyed, angrily told Forum 18 that "it was all kept illegally." Finally
    an appeal following the conviction of Baptists for running a children's
    holiday camp is due on 4 December. A mysterious "burglary" of a relative of
    one of the Baptists has also taken place.


    19 November 2009
    COMMENTARY: THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS - OUT OF STEP ON
    CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?artic le_id=1377
    The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg (ECHR) has recently made
    a very dangerous judgement for freedom of religion or belief in the
    Bayatyan v. Armenia case which puts it out of step with the international
    standards on conscientious objection to military service and with the
    Council of Europe's own human rights agenda, notes Derek Brett of
    Conscience and Peace Tax International <http://www.cpti.ws> in a commentary
    for Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>. The Court, apparently
    unaware of the recent parallel jurisprudence under the International
    Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, found no violation of the freedom
    of thought, conscience and religion in the imprisonment of a Jehovah's
    Witness for his refusal on grounds of conscientious objection to perform
    military service, or the subsequent increase in the sentence, which had
    been partly justified by his reasons for refusal. Brett argues that it is
    vital that the Grand Chamber of the ECHR agrees to hear the appeal in the
    Bayatyan case, as it alone can overturn the precedent which this will
    otherwise set for future ECHR cases.
    * See full article below. *


    19 November 2009
    COMMENTARY: THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS - OUT OF STEP ON
    CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION

    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?arti cle_id=1377
    By Derek Brett, Conscience and Peace Tax International
    <http://www.cpti.ws>

    Two recent Chamber judgements from the European Court of Human Rights in
    Strasbourg (ECHR) have caused considerable disquiet to defenders of freedom
    of religion or belief; those in the cases of Lautsi v. Italy and Bayatyan v
    Armenia. Of the two, the 3 November Lautsi verdict (Application no.
    30814/06) has attracted the most attention. By seeming to invent a right
    not to be offended by other people's religious symbols, it has been seen by
    some commentators to pose a serious threat to the linked rights of freedom
    of expression and freedom of religion or belief, in a way parallel to the
    long-running debate about so-called "defamation of religions", because all
    non-religious and religious beliefs, and their symbols, may cause offence
    to some people.

    However the present commentary focusses on the even more dangerous verdict
    delivered a week earlier, on 27 October 2009, in Bayatyan v. Armenia
    (Application no. 30814/06)
    <http://cmiskp.echr.coe.int////tkp197 /viewhbkm.asp?action=open&table=F69A27FD8FB861 42BF01C1166DEA398649&key=77093&sessionId=3 6257467&skin=hudoc-en&attachment=true>.
    a verdict which, as Judge Ann Power observed in a dissenting opinion, is
    "not just incompatible with current European standards on the question of
    conscientious objection but (..) parts company with the Court itself in
    terms of the overall direction of the jurisprudence as discernible in the
    case law" .

    In the Bayatyan verdict, the ECHR claimed that the imprisonment of a
    Jehovah's Witness for refusal on grounds of conscience to perform military
    service did not constitute an unlawful interference with his right to
    freedom of thought, conscience and religion. In this it "parts company" not
    just with the European consensus but also with the global international
    standards on this issue, and, unless it is swiftly overturned by the Grand
    Chamber, sets a most unfortunate precedent.

    In coming to its conclusion, the Chamber on the Bayatyan case chose to be
    guided, not by Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights and
    Fundamental Freedoms ("freedom of thought, conscience and religion"), but
    by the wording of a sub-paragraph of Article 4, which deals with forced
    labour. Overlooking clear evidence that the Armenian appeal court had
    increased Bayatyan's sentence precisely because of his conscientious
    objection and religious convictions, the Chamber read this wording out of
    context in order to address the issue of whether a state might choose not
    to acknowledge the right of conscientious objection to military service -
    even though the case arose only after Armenia had conceded such recognition
    in its accession commitments to the Council of Europe. In its decision, the
    Chamber felt itself bound by early admissibility decisions of the former
    Commission, despite a clear lead from the Grand Chamber of the Court that
    these deserved reconsideration. Worst of all, it deliberated in apparent
    ignorance of the fact that any possible relevance of forced labour
    provisions had now been definitively laid to rest in the jurisprudence on
    the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).

    Article 4.3 of the European Convention states "For the purpose of this
    article the term 'forced or compulsory labour' shall not include (..) b)any
    service of a military character or, in cases of conscientious objectors, in
    countries where they are recognised, service exacted instead of compulsory
    military service[...]." The purpose of this stipulation is clear: to ensure
    that arrangements excusing conscientious objectors from obligatory military
    service on condition that they perform alternative non-military service,
    are not outlawed as forced labour. In 1950, when the European Convention
    was drafted, the concept of conscientious objection was not as widely known
    as it is today, hence the words "in countries where they are recognised".

    The spurious argument that the almost identical Article 8.3(c)( ii) of the
    ICCPR - read in complete isolation even from the rest of the sentence - was
    primarily intended to make freedom of conscience contingent on national
    military recruitment legislation was dismissed by the Human Rights
    Committee in a decision under the ICCPR on the linked cases of Mr. Yeo-Bum
    Yoon and Mr. Myung-Jin Choi v. Republic of Korea
    (CCPR/C/88/D/1321-1322/2004 of 23 January 2007). In its "View" on these
    cases the Committee stated categorically that: "Article 8 of the Covenant
    [the ICCPR] itself neither recognises nor excludes a right of conscientious
    objection. Thus the present claim is to be assessed solely in the light of
    Article 18 of the Covenant". Article 18 of the ICCPR is, it should be
    noted, almost identical in wording to Article 9 of the European Convention.


    The Committee went on to conclude that conscientious objection to military
    service is "a protected form of manifestation of religious belief under
    article 18, paragraph 1." This means that "the conviction and sentence [of
    conscientious objectors] amounts to a restriction on their ability to
    manifest their religion or belief". Also, that even where "under the laws
    of the State party there is no procedure for recognition of conscientious
    objections against military service", not only must the State demonstrate
    that "in the [individual] case the restriction in question is necessary,
    within the meaning of article 18, paragraph 3, of the Covenant." but "such
    restriction must not impair the very essence of the right in question".

    However the Chamber did not note this source in the "relevant
    international documents" it identified in making the Bayatan decision.
    These were only:

    1. an opinion from 2000 by the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly
    (PACE) on Armenia's application for membership;

    2. a PACE resolution from 2001 on conscientious objection; and

    3. Article 10 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union
    (EU)

    The third of these is completely irrelevant to Armenia, which is neither
    an EU member nor a candidate country. Armenia is however a member of the
    United Nations, has ratified the ICCPR, and is a participating State in the
    Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). The list
    should therefore at a minimum have included (as well as Recommendation
    R(87)8, of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe which
    encouraged all members to recognise the right of conscientious objection to
    military service): the UN Human Rights Committee's General Comment 22 on
    Article 18 of the ICCPR, dealing with freedom of thought, conscience or
    religion, and their above-mentioned "View" in the Korean cases; Resolution
    1998/77 of the UN Commission on Human Rights; the relevant politically
    binding human dimension commitments of the OSCE; and various Opinions of
    the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention - especially Opinions 8/2008
    and 16/2008, concerning conscientious objectors in Colombia and Turkey.
    These Opinions, building on the decision in the Korean case, find that any
    imprisonment of a conscientious objector could constitute arbitrary
    detention because it resulted from the exercise of the freedom of thought,
    conscience and religion.

    The Bayatyan case is the first in which the direct applicability of
    Article 9 to conscientious objection has been considered by the ECHR
    itself. In the 2000 case of Thlimmenos v. Greece (Application no.
    34369/97), the Grand Chamber of the ECHR found a breach of Article 14
    (discrimination) in conjunction with Article 9, because a convicted
    conscientious objector had not been distinguished from a common criminal.
    It however noted that the question arose of "whether, notwithstanding the
    wording of Article 4.3 (b), the imposition of (..) sanctions on
    conscientious objectors to compulsory military service may in itself
    infringe the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion
    guaranteed by Article 9.1". This implied that the jurisprudence of the
    Commission, all of which is much earlier, deserved to be reviewed. However,
    the Chamber sitting on the Bayatyan case seemed to consider that Thlimmenos
    and the 2006 decision in Ülke v. Turkey (Application no. 39437/98), where
    repeated pressure on a conscientious objector to perform military service
    was found to constitute inhuman and degrading treatment, somehow confirmed
    the earlier jurisprudence. This was not so; in neither case did the freedom
    of conscience question need to be addressed in order to find a violation of
    the European Covenant.

    Significantly, both cases were decided before the issue had been directly
    addressed in the Korean case under the ICCPR. Significantly, too, Judge
    Elisabet Fura, (who had also sat on the Chamber which decided Ülke)
    indicated in a less than enthusiastic concurring opinion that she would
    have preferred in the Bayatyan case " to relinquish and allow the Grand
    Chamber to re-examine the issue /revisit the case-law/ and maybe to take a
    step further and to state that to sentence someone who refuses to do
    military service on grounds of conscience would be in violation of Article
    9."

    A very disturbing feature of the case is that Bayatyan's sentence had been
    increased by the Armenian Criminal and Military Court of Appeal on an
    appeal by the Prosecutor. He based this appeal on the grounds that
    Byayatyan "did not accept his guilt, explaining that he refused [military]
    service having studied the Bible, and as one of Jehovah's Witnesses his
    faith did not permit him to serve in the armed forces". The Armenian Appeal
    Court had agreed that as he not only did "not accept his guilt, nor did he
    repent of having committed the crime (and) taking into account the nature,
    motives and degree of social danger of the crime, (..) a harsher and
    adequate punishment must be imposed."

    In an admissibility decision of December 2006, which was even more
    shocking than the final outcome, the European Court had noted that an offer
    had been made to Bayatyan during this appeal hearing that all charges would
    be dropped if he abandoned his conscientious objection and agreed to
    perform military service, but found his claim that this was an attempt to
    coerce him to change his beliefs to be "manifestly ill-founded"
    <http://cmiskp.echr.coe.int// //tkp197/viewhbkm.asp?action=open&table=F69A27 FD8FB86142BF01C1166DEA398649&key=55801&ses sionId=37560251&skin=hudoc-en&attachment=t rue>.
    The effect of the deal offered is comparable to the repeated trials of
    conscientious objectors in Turkey and Israel. The UN Working Group on
    Arbitrary Detention found this in Opinions 36/1999 and 24/2003 to "be
    tantamount to compelling someone to change his/her mind for fear of being
    deprived of liberty".

    The fact that the prosecution was for Bayatyan's motivation would appear
    to be in direct conflict with the freedom of thought and conscience and
    religion. General Comment 22 states that this "is far-reaching and
    profound; it encompasses freedom of thought on all matters, personal
    conviction and the commitment to religion or belief" and "protects
    theistic, non-theistic and atheistic beliefs, as well as the right not to
    profess any religion or belief."

    Since a 1987 recommendation of the Council of Europe's Committee of
    Ministers, recognition of conscientious objection to military service has
    been Council of Europe policy, implemented by all the founder members with
    the glaring exception of Turkey. After 1989, such a commitment became a
    routine part of the accession criteria for new members, although Armenia
    and its neighbour Azerbaijan have been notable for their dilatoriness in
    fulfilling this commitment.

    Armenia undertook to introduce legislation by January 2004. The Council of
    Europe is however still not satisfied that the resultant Law on Alternative
    Service offers a genuinely civilian alternative to military service.
    Conscientious objectors are supervised by the Military Police under
    regulations laid down by the Defence Ministry, ordered to wear uniform
    provided by the military, and fed by the military. All breaches of orders
    or regulations are dealt with by the Military Prosecutor's Office.
    Meanwhile the number of Jehovah's Witnesses imprisoned (on sentences of
    between 24 and 36 months) for their conscientious objection has steadily
    increased - 71 at the last count. This is by far the largest number of
    conscientious objectors to military service imprisoned in any country which
    nominally recognises the right, and the sentences too are among the longest
    imposed on conscientious objectors anywhere (see also F18News 11 December
    2008 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 1228>).

    Azerbaijan has repeatedly assured the Council of Europe that it is
    drafting legislation to implement the civilian alternative to military
    service specified in its constitution, but this has still failed to
    appeared; meanwhile it intermittently imprisons conscientious objectors.
    Samir Huseynov, a Jehovah's Witness, was freed in May 2008 after serving
    seven months of a ten month sentence (see F18News 14 May 2008
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1129>. More recently,
    Mushfiq Mammedov, also a Jehovah's Witness, was fined in October 2009 after
    refusing military service.

    Recognition of the right of conscientious objection to military service is
    now the global norm. There are countries with obligatory military service
    where no conscientious objectors have come forward. But in very few
    countries are conscientious objectors subject to imprisonment because there
    is no legislation to enable them to be recognised. These are: Azerbaijan as
    noted above, Belarus (see eg. F18News 11 November 2009
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1374>), Colombia (before an
    October 2009 decision of the Constitutional Court), Eritrea, Israel, South
    Korea, Singapore, Turkey (see eg. F18News 10 July 2007
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=990>) and Turkmenistan (see
    eg. F18News 1 July 2008
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1166>). There is also the
    breakaway entity of Nagorno-Karabakh,(see eg. F18News 5 January 2009
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1236>).

    Europe having once led the way towards international recognition of the
    right of conscientious objection to military service, its regional
    jurisprudence is now dangerously out of step with the current
    interpretation of the ICCPR, (to which all Council of Europe members are
    party) as well as with the attempts of the Council of Europe itself at the
    political level to spread respect for the freedom of religion and belief to
    its new members. It is therefore vital that the Grand Chamber of the ECHR
    agrees to hear the appeal which Bayatyan's legal representatives have
    announced they will lodge; it alone can overturn the unfortunate precedent
    which this will otherwise set for future ECHR cases. (END)

    - Derek Brett, Conscience and Peace Tax International <http://www.cpti.ws>
    Representative to the UN in Geneva, contributed this comment to Forum 18
    News Service. Commentaries are personal views and do not necessarily
    represent the views of F18News or Forum 18.

    PDF and printer-friendly views of this article can be accessed from
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1377>. It may freely be
    reproduced, redistributed or quoted from, with due acknowledgement to Forum
    18 <http://www.forum18.org>.

    A compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
    (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments can be found at
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_ id=1351>.
    (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/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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