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Events of November 21, 2006

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This was seen and written by Ninel Fokina, president of the Almaty Helsinki

Committee and Andrei Grishin, official member of the International Bureau of

Human Rights and Law Observance.

 

On November 21, 2006 at 1 pm the information was received that according to

the court decision to evict the members of religion organization Society for

Krishna Consciousness from the occupied land near Sri Vrindavan Dham farm,

and the demolition of 13 country houses will begin immediately.

 

Heavy equipment was brought to the suburban community: trucks, demolition

machines, three busses with riot policemen, a bus with demolition squad and

the local authorities including the Hakim. Electricity was disconnected in

the morning of the same day.

 

There were only women and children in the village. All men went to work in

town.

 

The president of the Almaty Helsinki Committee Ninel Fokina tried to contact

different officials in Astana (the capital): B. Baikadamov, the envoy of

human rights, B. Muhamedjanov, the minister for internal affairs

I. Bakhtibayev, the assistant General Prosecutor; R. Aliev, the deputy

minister for foreign affairs.

 

She had a conversation with B. Baikadamov, the only person she could reach

at that time, who promised to communicate to the Committee of Religious

Affairs at the Ministry of Justice, the Supreme Court, and the Court

Administration Committee which includes the department of court decision

execution.

 

At 3 pm representatives of human rights organizations: Ninel Fokina, Andrei

Grishin, and Maxim Varfolomeev, press-secretary of the Society for Krishna

Consciousness, plus, a journalist and representative of Astana TV channel

left for the village which is located 40 km from Almaty.

 

All the roads to village were closed and patrolled by police. They would not

let anyone go through. The human rights representatives and the journalist

took detour through the fields. It was snowing, but they were able to reach

the border of the village because of the four-wheel-drive jeep they were

traveling in. But even that road was closed by patrol.

 

The jeep was not allowed to drive into the village. The patrol explained it

was instruction of authorities. When Grishin and the jeep driver tried to

pass by walk they were stopped and threatened to be put in handcuffs. And

the patrol promised to send for additional force.

 

Lieutenant colonel, who came with another patrol car, explained that they

are not allowed to the village for their own safety. He said that at that

time the electric line was being dismounted in the area.

 

The driver of the jeep had his wife and two months old daughter in the

village. He was begging to let him go through, but his request was denied.

He was told that safety is guaranteed to his family. This group could still

enter the village. They approached it from the other detour road, and

leaving the car on the sidewalk, one by one they entered the village.

 

As they approached the village they met two small groups of young people who

were not drunk but unnaturally exited.They held hammers, big dumb-bells,

metal crow-bars and sticks. Two of them politely greeted the group, and one

said gaily, “Your houses are finished.

 

Four big busses with toned windows and two cars of ambulance were parked at

the entrance of the village in the grove. 30-40 policemen stood by the

houses, and 20-30 people in civil clothes including the leaders of the

district with the Hakim, the head of local executive authority stood on the

street, watching the demolition.

 

It was snowing. Residents’ household stuff such as mattresses, blankets,

utensils cookware, and furniture were laying outside on the lawns by their

houses. People in construction outfits (labor people) got inside the houses

and started crushing windows and doors, destroying walls. The bulldozer was

demolishing the buildings and the big stone fencing with cast iron openwork

lattice which separated the houses from the driving area.

 

A small group of inhabitants (20-30 people, mostly women) did not offer

physical resistance. One of the women felt dizzy, fell down and was picked

up by the ambulance. Police was bringing down those few (basically women)

who tried to interfere with the destruction of their property. Two men tried

to prevent the entrance of destroyers into a house, but were brought down by

15 policemen who twisted their hands and took them away to the police car.

 

During all these events none of the representatives from the Office of

Public Prosecutor were present at the place of the event, even though both

Krishna people and legal service people demanded meeting with

representatives of the Office of Public Prosecutor who are obligated to be

present during this type of actions.

 

The Hakim of the Yetisu district who was personally responsible for this

action noticed A. Grishin photographing the destruction of the houses using

a digital camera and commanded the policemen to detain him. A. Grishin is an

officer of the Human Rights Bureau and a journalist.

 

To avoid confiscation of the camera A. Grishin tried to escape. He ran away

by 200 meters and was caught by the police. Police officers confiscated his

digital camera and took away his journalist certificate.

 

Then he was let free, but police refused to return the camera, saying that

they would give it to the Hakim. The camera was indeed found in the car of

the Hakim, but the flash card and the batteries were confiscated. When

Grishin approached the Hakim to find out for what reason his camera and his

journalist ID were confiscated, the Hakim told in front of the witnesses,

“If I see you here again, I will personally crash Your eyes, even though I

am the Hakim.”

 

No one of the policemen, who took part in the camera and ID confiscation,

wanted to reveal their names.

 

Ms. Fokina was able to talk with the assistant of the General prosecutor I.

Bakhtibayev, who did confirm that he would contact the prosecutor of the

province and he would work out this situation.

 

The envoy of human rights E. Baikadamov, who was also contacted, said that

the president of the Court Administration Committee Z. Makashev confirmed

that he would contact immediately the provincial department and would give

the appropriate instructions.

 

All the attempts of the representatives of the human rights organizations to

find the people in charge of the operation and give them any information

were unsuccessful.

 

All the present officials refused to speak and declared that they were not

responsible for the action. The Police colonels would point at bailiffs. The

bailiffs did not confirm their being bailiffs.

 

The OSCE representatives in Almaty Eugenia Benigni and Lisa Zhumakhmetova

did not make it to the village. Their car just was stoped by police.

 

When the darkness fell, at around 6 pm, everything was finished: 13 houses

destroyed, people thrown to the snowbound street, the village left without

electricity, without heat and water.

 

The condition of the witnesses can be described as shock. The condition of

the people who were thrown from their destroyed houses to the dirt and snow

cannot be described.

 

When all the 13 buildings were destroyed as was planned ... while the

adjacent houses of other people who do not belong to the Society for Krishna

Consciousness were left untouched even though their title deeds have the

same status ... the bailiffs decided to give an interview to the TV channel

“to avoid one-sided opinion.” However no one of them introduced himself. The

only thing they could say, “we are executing the court decision.”

 

Neither the Hakim, nor the police chiefs, nor the bailiffs would listen to

the arguments that the governmental commission established to solve the

issue around the Society for Krishna Consciousness has not yet come to final

decision.

 

Notice: the notifications of eviction and demolition of the 13 houses owned

by members of the cottage cooperative, who are the members of the religious

organization Society for Krishna Consciousness, were delivered to the

watchman of Sri Vrindavan Dham in the evening of November 20. The date of

execution and the period for evacuating the buildings were not stated. It

should be noted that the acting Kazakh law does not stipulate such a kind of

eviction as the demolition of houses, and the eviction should be accompanied

by the inventory of property removed from the evacuated building, while the

storage of this property should be provided is necessary.

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