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KAZAKHSTAN: MORE HARE KRISHNA HOME DEMOLITIONS PLANNED?
  By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 Friday 22 December 2006

 

The embattled Hare Krishna commune near Almaty, in southern Kazakhstan, is  preparing for its next court case, due to be held on 25 December, Forum 18  News Service has learnt. After this court case, five more Hare  Krishna-owned homes could be seized and bulldozed. Meanwhile, the  conclusion of a government-appointed Commission has shunted responsibility
 for resolving the dispute back to the local authorities, who remain  determined to close down the commune and seize the property.
 
 Asked whether he expects bulldozers to destroy the next five Hare Krishna  homes in the wake of the 25 December court case, Serik Niyazbekov, a  senior religious affairs official of the Almaty regional Justice  Department, responded: "We don't know what the court will decide, but I  don't expect so, that's my view," he told Forum 18 from Taldy-Kurgan on 22  December. Previous official assurances of no action, given to the Hare  Krishna community, have been broken (see F18News 21 November 2006 <
 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=873>).
 
 The 25 December hearing will probably be a preliminary hearing, Maksim  Varfolomeyev of the Hare Krishna community told Forum 18 from Almaty on 22  December. "It's unlikely to be over all in one day, but it's just a matter  of time," he said. "Our previous experience shows that the decision will  not be in our favour."
 
 Kazakhstan's religious minorities continue to have their religious freedom  violated by the government. In another recent example known to Forum 18, a  foreign Baptist was fined the equivalent of three months average salary  and forced to leave the country, after taking part in an "illegal" bible  discussion - despite, as Kazakh law professor Roman Podoprigora noted, no
 law having been broken by the Baptist or his church (see F18News 12  December 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=886>).
 
 The Sri Vrindavan Dham commune (named after the "beautiful forest of  Vrindavan" in India where Krishna spent his youth) in Karasai District is  the only Hare Krishna commune in the region. Thirteen homes out of 66 were  bulldozed in November, which provoked protests around the world. Lawyers  working to defend the commune were intimidated into dropping the case (see  F18News 1 December 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=881>).
 
 Niyazbekov of the regional Justice Department said that, under the terms  of the earlier court ruling that saw the thirteen Hare Krishna-owned homes  bulldozed and confiscated, the property is to be handed back to the  Ptitsevod collective from which the devotees bought them. "Something was  not right with the way the people bought these houses," Niyazbekov  insisted. "But I don't know all the details." He was unable to explain why  only Hare Krishna-owned homes have been affected.
 
 A further threat to the partially-demolished commune is state attempts to  try to de-register the Hare Krishna community (see F18News 8 December 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=885>).
 
 Gauhar Halil at the Kazakh Foreign Ministry in Astana told Forum 18 on 13  December that the offer to help resolve the situation from the Advisory  Council on Freedom of Religion or Belief of the Organisation for Security  and Cooperation (OSCE) is with the Religion Committee at the Justice  Ministry and that "unfortunately" it has not yet responded (see F18News 8
 December 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=885>).
 

 Halil added that the representatives of the OSCE office in Almaty were due  to meet the Hakim (administration head) of Karasai district, Bolat-bi  Kutpanov, on 15 December. However, Hare Krishna sources told Forum 18 on  22 December that this meeting has still not taken place as Kutpanov will  not schedule the meeting.
 
 Hare Krishna devotees have suspected for some time that a state-appointed  Commission on the issue was designed to divert criticism, not to resolve  the problem of the state's attacks on the commune's religious freedom (see  F18News 17 November 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=872>).
 
 Today (22 December) the Commission held a meeting for what Mukhashov  described as "discussion of the results of the Commission's work".  However, Mukhashov did not invite Govinda Swami - one of the Hare Krishna  representatives on the Commission - to this latest meeting. In addition to  state representatives, those present were Hare Krishna representatives, a
 member of the OSCE office in Almaty, and Yevgeny Zhovtis of the Kazakhstan  International Bureau of Human Rights and Law Observance and Ninel Fokina of  the Almaty Helsinki Committee.
 
 Hare Krishna sources told Forum 18 that the meeting was presented with the  Commission's previously circulated Conclusions. In addition, the meeting  was also given what the Hare Krishna community describes as a "totally  false" version of events, which the authorities announced that they would  use as a press release.
 
 The Hare Krishna community told Forum 18 that the Foreign Ministry  presented the Commission's conclusions to diplomats from the Netherlands,  the United Kingdom and the United States. "One interesting point," the  Hare Krishna community noted, "is that when the document was presented to  representatives of different government it was an undated and unsigned  document. And the Kazakh government alleges that the document was prepared
 prior to the demolition. This contradicts the statements of the Commission  who told us immediately prior to the demolition that the work was still in  progress."
 
 None of the Commission's Conclusions addressed the key question of why the  local authorities have moved only against Hare Krishna-owned homes, while  other neighbouring homes which were apparently privatised in exactly the  same way have not been touched. "From one angle it looks as if an  earthquake has hit the village. From another, it is obvious that whatever  the disaster, it picked its victims carefully," Natalia Anteleva of the  BBC, who visited the site on 11 December, reported. "In pristine snow by a  shimmering lake, the ruins of 13 houses lie scattered amid the untouched  cottages of their neighbours."
 
 Two human rights activists who were formal observers in the Commission's  work were devastating in their criticism of the way it operated. Yevgeny  Zhovtis of the Kazakhstan International Bureau of Human Rights and Law  Observance and Ninel Fokina of the Almaty Helsinki Committee complained on  14 December that "the authorities have shown no real desire to look into  the essence of the conflict and find a mutually beneficial, intelligent  and just solution" for the Krishna community. "Furthermore," they  continued, "the authorities constantly tried to avoid discussing the legal  aspects of the issue, although the justice of the court decisions against  the Krishna devotees is very doubtful" (see eg. F18News 24 November 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=876>).
 
 Zhovtis and Fokina noted that their impression was that the authorities  are trying "to defend all their decisions, and that the main goal of the  Commission was not to find the truth." The main goal of the Commission,  from the observations of meetings by these two respected human rights  activists, was "to prove by any means, even by "organising" public  opinion, that the Society for Krishna Consciousness is not right and that  there is no direct or indirect religious discrimination."
 
 Forum 18 has seen a copy of the Commission's Conclusions - undated but  signed by Amanbek Mukhashov, the head of the Religious Affairs Committee  at the Justice Ministry in the capital Astana. The Conclusions call on the  head of the local administration to observe the law, not to allow mistakes  in privatising land and to verify the way previous sites were privatised.  They call on the Hare Krishna community to ask the local authorities for  land to build a temple, to conduct religious ceremonies in accordance with  the law.
 
 They also call for the Hare Krishna to maintain what the document calls an  "objective presentation of the existing problems" when talking to local  authorities, the media and international organisations - without stating  what lies behind the accusation it implies. No call is made for the Kazakh  authorities to stop claiming that the demolition and attack on the Hare
 Krishna community's religious freedom is not a religious freedom violation  (see eg. F18News 1 December 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=881>).
 
 The community - but not the authorities - are also told by the Commission  to resolve the dispute with the cooperative that had owned the land "in  accordance with the law". It urges the Justice Department and the  Religious Affairs Committee of Almaty Region to exercise "constant  control" over the way local authorities, religious communities and  individuals observe the Religion Law.
 
 

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