Events

KAZAKHSTAN: WILL REST OF HARE KRISHNA COMMUNE NOW BE DESTROYED?

 By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>, and
 Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>

Devotees in the embattled Hare Krishna commune in a village near  Kazakhstan's commercial capital Almaty have vowed to fight on, despite the  authorities' destruction on 21 November of 13 of 66 Hare Krishna-owned  homes. "The community is in shock, but they are determined to defend their  homes and place of worship," community member Govinda Swami told Forum 18
 News Service from the Indian capital Delhi on 24 November. "They don't  want to give the signal that they've been defeated by the government." But  he says the remaining home owners fear that court rulings against others  could see them evicted too and that the community especially fears for the  temple, housed on one floor of one of the homes.
 

The authorities insist the Hare Krishna devotees have no right to their  homes. But two human rights activists who witnessed the destruction  despite police attempts to stop them, Ninel Fokina and Andrei Grishin,  pointed out that while 13 of the 66 Hare Krishna homes were destroyed on  court orders, "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 Sri Vrindavan Dham commune in the village of Seleksia in Zhetisu rural  area of Keskelen district, 40 kms (25 miles) from Almaty, was the only such  Hare Krishna commune in the region and officials have long sought to  suppress it.
 
 Govinda Swami, a US member of the community until being forced to leave  Kazakhstan on 20 November as his visa was not renewed, said he believes  the homes were destroyed to demoralise the community and force it to leave  the village. "Then they will move in to destroy the temple, situated in one  of the homes," he told Forum 18. "If the authorities destroy the temple it  would be devastating as they would have effectively destroyed the  community."
 
 Maksim Varfolomeyev, spokesperson for Kazakhstan's Society for Krishna  Consciousness, is outraged by the way Keskelen district court bailiffs  demolished the 13 Hare Krishna-owned homes. "Our co-believers' belongings  were just thrown in the mud," he told Forum 18 on 23 November. "Officials  simply refused to talk with us or explain what they were doing." Those
 evicted from their homes have had to take shelter with other commune  members or move to Almaty.
 
 The community has posted a video of the destruction and photographs of the  destroyed homes on its website <>
 
 At the office of the Keskelen district court bailiffs, the duty officer  who refused to give his name said on 23 November that all the senior staff  were out of the office and there was nobody who could answer Forum 18's  questions.
 
 Also unwilling to explain to Forum 18 why the Hare Krishna homes have been  destroyed is Bagdad Akhmetayev, the hakim (head) of the rural  administration of Zhetisu in Keskelen district where the Krishna farm is  located. According to Varfolomeyev, he was the only representative of the  district authorities present at the demolition. "I simply came to watch
 the demolition and I am not prepared to make any comment. Please ask the  court bailiffs directly," Akhmetayev told Forum 18 on 23 November.
 
 "Unfortunately Kazakh law does not prohibit evictions during the winter   period and also does not oblige the court bailiffs to give those being  evicted a few days notice," human rights activist Yevgeni Zhovtis told  Forum 18 from Almaty on 23 November. "All the same, there were crude
violations of the law. The court bailiffs had the right to evict the residents of the houses but not to demolish the buildings themselves. It  was also a very crude violation to throw the belongings of the Krishna  devotees into the mud. The court bailiffs were obliged to put the  devotees' belongings into store."
 
 Human rights activists Fokina and Grishin rushed to the village on 21  November as soon as they heard the news of the destruction. They found it  blockaded by police and had to gain access by foot.
 
 In their joint account of events, they report attempts to prevent evidence  of the destruction reaching the outside world. They reported that hakim  Akhmetayev noticed Grishin photographing the destruction of the houses  using a digital camera and ordered the police to detain him. To avoid  confiscation of the camera Grishin tried to escape, but was caught by the
 police, who confiscated his camera and journalist accreditation.
 
 Grishin was then freed, but the police (who would not give their names)  refused to return the camera, saying they would give it to the hakim.  Fokina and Grishin report that the camera was indeed found in the hakim's  car, but the flash card and the batteries were confiscated. When Grishin  approached Akhmetayev to find out why his camera and his journalist  accreditation had been confiscated, the hakim told him in front of  witnesses, "If I see you here again, I will personally smash your eyes,  even though I am the hakim."
 
 Fokina and Grishin report that police stopped the car carrying two  officials of the Almaty office of the Organisation for Security and  Cooperation in Europe, Eugenia Benigni and Lisa Zhumakhmetova, who were  therefore unable to reach the village.
 
 The demolition was carried out with some brutality, at least one home  being destroyed with a mother and infant child still inside. By 4.50 pm on  the day the demolition began (21 November), after OPON riot police had  sealed off the area and cameras were confiscated from witnesses, three  houses were destroyed. The windows of the other houses had been smashed to
 render the houses uninhabitable in the freezing Kazakh weather conditions.  Temperatures that night were expected to drop to minus 3 degrees  Centigrade (26 degrees Fahrenheit) (see F18News 21 November 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=873>).
 
 OPON riot police who took part in the destruction threw personal  belongings of the Hare Krishna devotees into the snow, and many devotees  were left without clothes. Power for lighting and heating systems had been  cut off before the demolition began. Furniture and larger household  belongings were loaded onto trucks. Officials said these possessions would  be destroyed. Two men who tried to prevent the bailiffs from entering a  house to destroy it were seized by 15 police officers who twisted their  hands and took them away to the police car.
 
 The homes were demolished even though the Hare Krishna community was  promised that no action would be taken before the report of a state  Commission - supposedly set up to resolve the dispute - was made public.  The chair of that Commission, Amanbek Mukhashev of the state Religious  Affairs Committee, told Forum 18 that if the commune continues, "the  situation could turn out badly for the Krishna followers" (see F18News 17  November 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=872>).  Mukhashev claimed to Forum 18 on the day the demolition began that "I know  nothing about the demolition of the Hare Krishna homes - I'm on holiday,"  adding that "as soon as I return to work at the beginning of December we  will officially announce the results of the Commission's investigation"  (see F18News 21 November 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=873>).
 
 Apart from the ongoing official process, the demolition violated Kazakh  laws by giving only 24 hours notice of the demolition, the demolition  orders not being personally served on and signed for by their intended  victims, and because officials of the public prosecutor's office were not  present to oversee the enforcement of the court rulings.
 
 Fokina and Grishin complain about the court orders delivered the day  before the demolition. "The date of execution and the period for  evacuating the buildings were not stated," they point out. "It should be  noted that 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 as necessary."
 
 It is also unclear - given the illegalities surrounding the demolition -  how the authorities plan to legally carry out their threat to charge the  Hare Krishna devotees for the demolition of the homes and commune.
 
 The authorities have long wanted to take over the Hare Krishna community and their commune (see F18News 19 April 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=764>). An attempt earlier  this year to bulldoze the commune was frustrated by the presence of local
 journalists, but the authorities vowed to try again when the "fuss" had  died down (see F18News 26 April 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=769>). The authorities have  with some local television stations encouraged intolerance against religious minorities, such as Baptists and Hare Krishna devotees. This  hostile coverage has, the devotees are convinced, led to intolerant  attacks on them by other Kazakh citizens (see F18News 2 June 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=793>).
 
 Sources, who preferred to be unnamed, have told Forum 18 of "persistent  rumours" that Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev's brother, Bulat  Nazarbayev, wants to take over the Hare Krishna devotees' farm (see  F18News 17 November 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=872>).
 
 Kazakhstan is currently bidding to become Chairman-in-Office of the  Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), despite the  country's poor human rights record (see eg. F18News 29 June 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=806>). President  Nazarbayev's government often boasts of its claimed religious tolerance,  but religious minorities who experience the state's policies are sceptical  of these boasts (see F18News 8 September 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=839>).
 
 Legal restrictions on religious freedom have been increased by the authorities, through "extremism" and "national security" legal amendments  (see the F18News Kazakhstan religious freedom survey at  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=701>). Baptists and other
 Protestant Christians have so far been the main victims of the legal  changes, being fined for unregistered religious activity (see eg. F18News  2 October 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=848>).
 
 Foreign missionaries belonging to both the Presbyterian church (see  F18News 15 November 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=871>) and Tabligh Jama'at
 international Islamic missionary organisation have been fined and deported  (see F18News 14 November 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=868>). Some fear that
 changes being planned by the KNB secret police to the Religion Law will  ban sharing beliefs and all missionary activity (see F18News 24 October 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=859>).
 
 For a personal commentary on how attacking religious freedom damages  national security in Kazakhstan, see eg. F18News  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=564>
 
 For more background, see Forum 18's Kazakhstan religious freedom survey at  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=701>
 
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