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Russian Court Founds Jehovah'S Witnesses Local Leader Guilty Of Extr

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  • Russian Court Founds Jehovah'S Witnesses Local Leader Guilty Of Extr

    RUSSIAN COURT FOUNDS JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES LOCAL LEADER GUILTY OF EXTREMISM

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    November 3, 2011 - 14:39 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - A regional court in Russia's Altai region found the
    local head of the Jehovah's Witnesses guilty of extremism on Thursday,
    November and sentenced him to 100 hours of community service, RIA
    Novosti reported.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses is an international religious organization.

    Many representatives of more traditional religions consider it to be
    a totalitarian pseudo-Christian sect.

    The Gorno-Altaysk City Court initially acquitted Alexander Kalistratov,
    head of the Altai branch of the Jehovah's Witnesses, on April 14. The
    Supreme Court of the Altai Republic later canceled the acquittal
    judgment at the request of the prosecutor's office and remanded the
    case for reconsideration to the same court.

    The second trial started on June 22. Investigators opened a case
    against Kalistratov after he published and distributed 48 religious
    articles of "a strongly extremist nature" aimed at discrediting
    other religions.

    Prosecutors demanded 140 hours community service for Kalistratov
    after he was convicted of inciting hatred and insulting human dignity.

    Prosecutors told RIA Novosti they will not appeal the sentence although
    Kalistratov was sentenced to only 100 hours community service.

    The case is not the first time the authorities in Russia have
    acted against the Jehovah's Witnesses. In June 2010, a court in
    Komsomolsk-na-Amur ordered the blocking of a website operated by the
    group, claiming it violated the integrity of the Russian Federation
    and incited social, racial and religious discord."

    Human Rights Without Frontiers (HRWF) and other organizations have
    criticized Russia's 2002 law on religious extremism, claiming it
    has "led to the prosecution of numerous peaceful groups with do not
    threaten public order, social peace or national security."

    HRWF says 265 religious and faith-based organizations are on a
    blacklist of so-called extremist groups in Russia.

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