Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Azerbaijan Destroys Hare Krsna Books

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Roundup: Religious-freedom restrictions in Europe

"Sebouh Z Tashjian" <seb_tashjian

Sun, 13 Jul 2003 22:46:53 -0700 (PDT)

(in Azerbaijan, thousands of Hare Krishna books held by customs for

seven years were recently destroyed).

 

----

----------

RELIGIOUS LITERATURE: Belarus and Azerbaijan require compulsory prior

censorship of all religious literature produced or imported into the

country. Azerbaijani customs routinely confiscate religious

literature,

releasing it only when the State Committee for Work with Religious

Organizations grants explicit written approval for each title and the

number

of copies authorized. Forbidden books are sent back or destroyed

(thousands

of Hare Krishna books held by customs for seven years were recently

destroyed). Even countries without formal religious censorship-- eg.

Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan -- routinely confiscate imported

religious

literature (Russian-language Baptist magazines were recently burnt by

Uzbekistan) or found during raids on homes. Uzbekistan routinely bars

access

to web sites it dislikes, such as foreign Muslim sites.

 

 

Catholic World News

 

Roundup: Religious-freedom restrictions in Europe

 

Oslo, Jul. 11 (Forum 18/CWNews.com) - As the Organization for

Security and

Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) prepares for a conference on religious

freedom,

the Forum 18 news service has produced a roundup of religious-freedom

violations, especially in Eastern Europe.

 

"Despite their binding OSCE commitments for religious freedom,"

writes Felix

Corley of the Forum 18 news service, "in some OSCE member states

believers

are still fined, imprisoned for the peaceful exercise of their faith,

religious services are broken up, places of worship confiscated and

even

destroyed, religious literature censored and religious communities

denied

registration."

 

[The following is the full text of the Forum 18report.]

 

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE),

which has

as members all the states of Europe, Central Asia, and North America,

does

not work by coercion but by consensus and persuasion. Membership is

not

compulsory: states have the free choice whether to accept the binding

OSCE

commitments by joining or not. The commitment of all OSCE states to

respect

freedom of religion is clear. The 1990 OSCE human dimension

conference

declared "everyone will have the right to freedom of thought,

conscience,

and religion. This right includes freedom to change one's religion or

belief

and freedom to manifest one's religion or belief, either alone or in

community with others, in public or in private, through worship,

teaching,

practice, and observance. The exercise of these rights may be subject

only

to such restrictions as are prescribed by law and are consistent with

international standards."

 

As delegates assemble for the OSCE Supplementary Human Dimension

Meeting on

Freedom of Religion or Belief, on 17-18 July 2003, many ask how

violators of

these fundamental commitments-- especially Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan,

Belarus, Azerbaijan, and Armenia-- can be allowed to continue as

members of

an organization whose fundamental principles they blatantly flout.

 

OSCE officials argue off the record that it is better to keep

violators in,

with the hope that they can be persuaded to mend their ways, rather

than

expel them, abandoning local people to the clutches of their

governments.

The result is that persecuted believers Forum 18 has spoken to in a

number

of states now have little faith in what the OSCE can and will do for

them to

protect their right to religious freedom.

 

Forum 18surveys here some, but not all, of the continuing abuses in

the

eastern half of the OSCE region. This is not a comprehensive survey

of

abuses in the countries covered, due to lack of space. The Forum 18

web site

documents abuses in detail. Abuses also occur in other OSCE countries

(such

as the About-Picard law in France or restrictions on newer religious

communities in Belgium).

 

RELIGIOUS WORSHIP: An alarming number of states raid religious

meetings to

close down services and punish those who take part. Turkmenistan is

the

worst offender: it treats all non-Muslim and non-Russian Orthodox

worship as

illegal. Uzbekistan and Belarus specifically ban unregistered

religious

services. In Belarus, numerous Protestant congregations-- some

numbering

more than a thousand members-- cannot meet because they cannot get a

registered place to worship. Officials in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and

Azerbaijan also raid places where worship is being conducted.

 

PLACES OF WORSHIP: Opening a place of worship is impossible in some

states.

In Turkmenistan is impossible to open a place of worship for non-

Muslim and

non-Russian Orthodox communities, and those that existed before the

mid-1990s were confiscated or bulldozed. Uzbekistan has closed down

thousands of mosques since 1996 and often denies Christian groups'

requests

to open churches. Azerbaijan also obstructs the opening of Christian

churches and tries to close down some of those already open. Belarus

makes

it almost impossible for religious communities without their own

building

already or substantial funds to rent one to find a legal place to

worship.

An Autocephalous Orthodox church (which attracted the anger of the

government and the Russian Orthodox Church) was bulldozed in 2002.

 

REGISTRATION: Where registration is compulsory before any religious

activity

can start (Belarus and Uzbekistan) or where officials claim that it

is

(Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan), life is made difficult for

communities that either choose not to register (such as one community

of

Baptists in the former Soviet republics) or are denied registration

(the

majority of religious communities in Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan).

 

Registration in Turkmenistan is all but impossible (the 1996 religion

law

requires each community to have 500 adult citizen members), but even

in

countries such as Azerbaijan or Uzbekistan with less onerous hurdles,

registration for disfavored communities is often made impossible--

officials

in the sanitary/epidemiological service are among those with the

power of

veto in Uzbekistan. Belarus, Azerbaijan, Slovenia, Slovakia, and

Russia are

also among states which to widely varying degrees make registration

of some

groups impossible or very difficult.

 

RELIGIOUS LITERATURE: Belarus and Azerbaijan require compulsory prior

censorship of all religious literature produced or imported into the

country. Azerbaijani customs routinely confiscate religious

literature,

releasing it only when the State Committee for Work with Religious

Organizations grants explicit written approval for each title and the

number

of copies authorized. Forbidden books are sent back or destroyed

(thousands

of Hare Krishna books held by customs for seven years were recently

destroyed). Even countries without formal religious censorship-- eg.

Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan -- routinely confiscate imported

religious

literature (Russian-language Baptist magazines were recently burnt by

Uzbekistan) or found during raids on homes. Uzbekistan routinely bars

access

to web sites it dislikes, such as foreign Muslim sites.

 

INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS: Believers in institutions such as prisons,

hospitals, or

the army may face difficulties obtaining and keeping religious

literature,

praying in private, and receiving visits from spiritual leaders and

fellow-believers. Muslim prisoners in Uzbekistan have been punished

for

praying and fasting during Ramadan. Death-row prisoners wanting

visits from

Muslim imams and Russian Orthodox priests have had requests denied,

even for

final confession before execution.

 

DISCRIMINATION: Turkmenistan has dismissed from state jobs hundreds

of

active Protestants, Jehovah's Witnesses and other religious

minorities.

Turkmen and Azeri officials try to persuade people to abandon their

faith

and "return" to their ancestral faith (Islam). Armenia has ordered

local

police chiefs to persuade police who were members of faiths other

than the

Armenian Apostolic Church to abandon their faith. If persuasion

failed, such

employees were to be sacked. Belarus has subjected leaders of

independent

Orthodox Churches and Hindus to pressure-- including fines, threats,

and

inducements-- to abandon their faith or emigrate. Officials in

Azerbaijan,

Armenia, and Belarus repeatedly attack disfavored religious

minorities in

the media, insulting their beliefs, accusing them falsely of illegal

or

"destructive" activities, as well as inciting popular hostility to

them.

 

GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE: Many governments meddle in the internal

affairs of

religious communities. Central Asian governments insist on choosing

national

and local Muslim leaders. Turkmenistan ousted the chief mufti in

January.

Tajikistan has conducted "attestation tests" of imams, ousting those

who

failed. Islamic schools are tightly controlled (in Turkmenistan and

Uzbekistan, schools have either been closed or access to them

restricted).

Turkmenistan obstructs those seeking religious education abroad. Some

countries with large Orthodox communities (but not Russia or

Ukraine), try

to bolster the largest Orthodox Church and obstruct rival

jurisdictions

(Belarus, Bulgaria, Georgia, Moldova). Russia has prevented

communities from

choosing their leadership, expelling a Catholic bishop, several

priests, and

dozens of Protestant and other leaders.

 

PROTECTION FROM VIOLENCE: Law enforcement agencies fail to give

religious

minorities the same protection as major groups. Georgia has had

violence by

Orthodox vigilantes, with over 100 attacks in the past four years on

True

Orthodox, Catholics, Baptists, Pentecostals, and Jehovah's Witnesses,

who

have been physically attacked, places of worship blockaded and

religious

events disrupted. The authorities-- who know the attackers' identity--

have

sentenced no one. In some cases, police have cooperated with attacks

or

failed to investigate them. In Kosovo the NATO-led peacekeeping force

and

United Nations police repeatedly fail to protect Serbian Orthodox

churches

in use and graveyards. No one has been arrested or prosecuted,

despite over

100 attacks which have destroyed or badly-damaged churches.

 

LACK OF TRANSPARENCY: Major laws and decrees affecting religious life

are

drawn up without public knowledge or discussion. Examples are the

restrictive laws on religion of Belarus and Bulgaria in 2002, and

planned

new laws in Georgia, Azerbaijan and Moldova. International

organizations,

such as the OSCE or the Council of Europe may be consulted but

governments

often refuse to allow their comments to be published or ignore them.

Many

countries retain openly partisan and secretive government religious-

affairs

offices. Slovenia's religious affairs office has refused to register

any new

religious communities in the past three years. Azerbaijan's has

stated which

communities it will refuse to register and what changes other

communities

will have to make to their statutes and activities to gain

registration.

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORTING: Those reporting on religious freedom

such as

Forum 18 and groups campaigning on the issue face lack of

cooperation,

obstruction and harassment. Those suspected of passing on news of

violations

have been threatened in Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan, with the aim of

forcing

silence. In a region without much government transparency or a

genuinely

free media, officials involved in harassing religious communities

often

refuse to explain to journalists what they have done and why. Local

campaigning groups are denied registration or kept waiting.

Demonstrators

protesting in Belarus against the restrictive new religion law were

fined.

Government reports on religious freedom issues to bodies such as the

OSCE or

Council of Europe are often confidential and closed to public

scrutiny.

 

CONCLUSION: Many of these restrictions predate the 11 September 2001

terrorist attacks-- and 1999 Islamic-inspired incursions into Central

Asia--

so governments cannot validly argue that such restrictions are

necessary to

ensure public security. The comprehensive nature of many of these

measures

shows the hostility of some OSCE member states to the right to

exercise the

faith of one's choice freely, something described by the European

Court of

Human Rights in 1993 as "one of the foundations of a democratic

society."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...