Events

KAZAKHSTAN:

FOREIGN BAPTIST FORCED OUT FOR "ILLEGAL" BIBLE DISCUSSION
 
 By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 Tuesday 12 December 2006


Some seven law-enforcement officials secretly attended a youth service at  the Spring of Water Baptist church in Oskemen (Ust-Kamenogorsk) in East  Kazakhstan Region in August, church members have told Forum 18 News  Service. The officials filmed a veteran congregation member, Dan Ballast,  participating in a Bible discussion. Ballast - a US citizen - was later
 given a massive fine, together with a deportation order. Although the  deportation order was later rescinded, Ballast left Kazakhstan on 22  November. "Dan was a member of our church for eleven years, but they said  that as a foreign citizen he was not allowed to teach or even speak in the  church," one congregation member told Forum 18 from the town on 6 December. "Officials questioned us for an hour and a half after the service, and we  told them we didn't want to violate the law."
 
 On 23 October, Judge Y. Kuderbayev of the town administrative court found  Ballast guilty of violating Article 394 part 2 of the Code of  Administrative Offences, which punishes "failure of the goals of entry to  accord with the goals indicated in the visa". In addition to the  deportation order, Ballast was fined 41,200 tenge (1,967 Norwegian Kroner,  242 Euros or 320 US Dollars), about three months' average salary in  Kazakhstan. The East Kazakhstan Regional court annulled Ballast's  deportation order on 14 November, as he was already due to leave the  country when his contract at Oskemen's Kazakh-American Free University  ended, and he was able to show the court his departure ticket. He left  Kazakhstan after paying the fine.
 
 A friend of Ballast in Kazakhstan insisted to Forum 18 that, as a church  member, Ballast should have every right to take part in the religious life  of his chosen religious community regardless of his nationality.  "Apparently someone forgot to explain to the Kazakhstan government that  residents and citizens are guaranteed their rights to religion regardless  of profession," the friend noted. "This violates both freedom of religion  and freedom of speech."
 
 Forum 18 was unable to reach A. Islyamov, head of the town Migration  Police, or any officials of the Internal Affairs Department or the  Prosecutor's Office, who were prepared to explain why the Spring of Water  church was being spied on during a service, and why Ballast was punished  for speaking to a religious congregation he had belonged to for eleven  years.
 
 Rules restricting "missionary activity" by foreign citizens without  specific authorisation were introduced in 2003 with amendments to the  decree governing the entry, exit and presence in Kazakhstan of foreign  citizens. Amendments to Kazakhstan's religion law in July 2005 banned both  foreigners and local people from conducting "missionary activity" without  specific state approval (see F18News 8 December 2005  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=701>). 

 

Officials interpret  this as banning foreigners from doing anything more than merely attending  meetings. The Kazakhstan Migration Police claimed that, by speaking in his  local church, Ballast had violated the terms of his business visa, which  allowed him only to work at the university.
 
 However, Almaty-based law professor Roman Podoprigora, who specialises in  laws on religion, believes such interpretations of the law to be illegal.  "There are no provisions in law which prohibit foreigners from  participating in religious ceremonies in different roles," he told Forum  18 from Almaty on 8 December. "Under Kazakh law there is no special type  of missionary visa, while under the existing Religion Law, service in a  registered religious organisation is not recognised as missionary  activity."
 Congregation members stressed to Forum 18 that the church - which is  outside the framework of the Kazakhstan Baptist Union - has state  registration and has not otherwise encountered problems. "There shouldn't  be any consequences for the church over what happened to Dan."
 
 The youth service on Sunday 20 August was attended by some 60 people, and  it was during a discussion of various Bible passages that Ballast came up  to speak. "Dan didn't preach but merely gave his personal view of a Bible  passage," church members told Forum 18. "He spoke for about thirty  minutes." Asked how the law-enforcement officials knew to attend the  service and film it, one church member responded: "Someone rang them.  These things happen here."
 
 After the service, police officers present, who had filmed Ballast  speaking, questioned the pastor and congregation members for an hour and a  half. They forced witnesses to sign statements that Ballast had been  preaching. The following day, he was summoned to the town prosecutor's  office and was questioned for three hours. Prosecutors initially intended  to prosecute Ballast for working as a "missionary" without being  registered with the town authorities, sources told Forum 18. But a few  days later, the prosecutors dropped the case and sent the papers to the  Migration Police, to see if they could find a way to punish him.
 
 Ballast was ordered to report to the Migration Police on five separate  occasions over the following six weeks. Eventually, they opened a formal  case against him, stating that he had violated the terms of his visa. They  stated that the law requires that a person must engage only in activities  related to their visa.
 
 Ironically, officials had earlier praised Ballast for his educational work  in Kazakhstan and administration of scholarships for local students to the  United States. Ballast received awards from the East Kazakhstan Regional  administration and the Ministry of Education. Kazakhstan's President  Nursultan Nazarbayev personally presented Ballast with his Master's Degree  in Kazakh Language and Literature, that he earned from East Kazakhstan  State University.
 
 The Kazakh authorities have been treating foreigners who are active in  local religious communities with growing suspicion. South Korean pastor  Kim U Sob, who led the Love Presbyterian Church in the southern Kazakh  town of Kyzyl-Orda [Qyzylorda] for eight years - and had been invited to  an event as an official speaker by the authorities - was punished for
 conducting religious activity in a town near Kyzyl-Orda, while having  permission to conduct "missionary activity" only in the town itself. His  accreditation was revoked and the Migration Police then refused to extend  his visa once it expired (see F18News 15 November 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=871>). Pastor Kim was  forced to leave Kazakhstan on 14 November.
 
 Members of the Tabligh Jama'at international Islamic missionary  organisation - both Kazakh citizens and foreigners - have been fined this  year for preaching in mosques without accreditation. A number of the  foreigners have been expelled (see F18News 14 November 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=868>).
 
 Choosing not to try to extend his visa in November was Hare Krishna  devotee Govinda Swami, an American member of the embattled Sri Vrindavan  Dham commune (named after the "beautiful forest of Vrindavan" in India  where Krishna spent his youth) in Karasai district near Almaty. Govinda  Swami told Forum 18 on 7 December that after the government commission
 formed allegedly to resolve the conflict had begun its work, local  religious affairs official Ryskul Zhunisbayeva complained that he was  working as a "missionary without a missionary visa" and threatened that  his visa would not be renewed.
 

On 21 November, the day after Govinda Swami left Kazakhstan, the  authorities began bulldozing Hare Krishna-owned homes at the commune. The  authorities seem determined to complete the demolition and confiscation  despite an international outcry (see F18News 8 December 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=885>).
  In recent years other foreign citizens leading local religious communities  have seen their visas revoked or not renewed, while other foreign citizens  invited to Kazakhstan for religious events have faced denials of visas  (see F18News 8 June 2005
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=578>).
 
 Information demanded for state registration in Kazakhstan often greatly  exceeds any information reasonably necessary just to obtain legal status.  Both Baptists (see F18News 9 June 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=797>) and Hare Krishna  devotees (see F18News 8 December 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=885>) have complained to  Forum 18 about the highly intrusive and unreasonable demands the state
 makes for information, under the guise of registration applications.
 
 Legal restrictions on religious freedom have been increased by the  authorities, with the 2005 passage of "extremism" and "national security"  amendments, which (amongst other things) ban unregistered religious  activity, greatly curtail missionary activity, enhance state control over
 religious education, and permit suspension of registration of a religious  organisation, with a ban on speaking to the media by members of the  organisation (see the F18News Kazakhstan religious freedom survey at  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=701>).
 
 
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