Events

Kazakhstan: State buldozes Hare Krishna commune,

bids to Chair OSCE
 
 By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 

 Today (21 November) the demolition began of 13 Hare Krishna-owned homes at  the Hare Krishna commune, spokesperson Maksim Varfolomeyev told Forum 18  News Service from the commercial capital Almaty. He said the authorities  had brought two buses of OPON riot police and closed off all access to the  commune. "At present a bulldozer is knocking down one house," Anastasia, a  Hare Krishna devotee, told Forum 18 from the site as she watched the
 destruction, "while a further four are being knocked down by hand." Forum  18 asked Anastasia to pass her mobile phone to the officials organising  the demolition so that they could explain to Forum 18 why they were doing  so, but they refused to speak to Forum 18. Officials at the scene have  been confiscating cameras from witnesses.
 
 At the time of publication of this article (4.50 pm Almaty time), three  homes have been destroyed, and all the windows in the homes of the Hare  Krishna devotees have been destroyed.
 
 "I have no words to describe what I have seen," Ninel Fokina, head of the  Almaty Helsinki Committee, told Forum 18 from the demolition site. "They  have no right to move people out of their homes in winter."
 
  It is currently snowing in Almaty, with the temperature being 6 degrees  Centigrade (42 degrees Fahrenheit), and expected to drop to minus 3  degrees Centigrade (26 degrees Fahrenheit) tonight.
 
 "It is indicative that the demolition of the homes began before we had  been given the results of the state special Commission's investigation  into the conflict over the commune," Varfolomeyev told Forum 18. "It's  also significant that the Commission chairman - Amanbek Mukhashev of the  Justice Ministry's Religious Affairs Committee - promised us that
 implementation of any court decisions would be frozen until the results of  the Commission's investigation were officially published." He said the  Commission had appealed to the General Prosecutor's Office to that effect.
 
 The order to demolish the homes was issued by the Karasai District Court,  where the commune is based, and is being carried out by the Court  Executors. "The bulldozers belong to the Karasai district administration,"  the Hare Krishna devotees report. The execution orders were given to a  night watchman. "Not one person has personally received the order or has
 signed that it has been received," - as the law requires - they added.
 
 Yesterday (20 November), at 6 AM in the morning, an unidentified person  delivered a stack of orders from the Court Executors of the Karasai  District Court. The orders stated that the owners of cottages must destroy  their own homes, or they will be destroyed by the government at the expense   of the owners. 24 hours later, several busses of OPON riot police, 2  ambulances, 2 empty lorries, and Court Executors arrived to destroy the  Krishna devotees' homes and personal temples.
 
  "I know nothing about the demolition of the Hare Krishna homes - I'm on   holiday," Mukhashev told Forum 18 on 21 November from the capital Astana.   "As soon as I return to work at the beginning of December we will      officially announce the results of the Commission's investigation." He  acknowledged that the Commission had decided to freeze the implementation  of all court decisions about the Hare Krishna commune until the  Commission's results had been officially published. But he told Forum 18  it is difficult to say whether he believed the demolition of the homes is  lawful.
  "It is snowing in Kazakhstan and these folks are losing their homes,"  Govinda Swami, a leading member of the community who is a US citizen, told  Forum 18 from Delhi on 21 November. "They entered one home where there was  woman with infant and started destroying her home. We have been regularly  told that the work of the commission is not finished and still they have  attacked in this way." He said that it is "not a coincidence" that on 20  November his Kazakh visa expired "and on 21st they attacked". He expressed  disappointment at what he regarded as the Commission and the President's  bad faith.
 
 He said that when his colleague Rati Manjari managed to get through to  Mukhashev he put down the phone. He said community members had contacted  other officials in the Religious Affairs Committee "who had no idea what  was going on".
 
 Govinda Swami added that Fokina of the Almaty Helsinki Committee had  spoken to Kazakhstan's human rights ombudsperson, Bolat Baikadamov, who  said that he would go to the Religious Affairs Committee to enquire what  is happening.
 
 The moves against the Hare Krishna came during President Nazarbayev's  visit to the United Kingdom (UK) and on the same day that he was meeting  British Prime Minister Tony Blair. "The President will be seeking Mr  Blair's support for Kazakhstan's bid to be the first Central Asian  chairman-in-office of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in  Europe (OSCE) in 2009," the Kazakhstan Embassy in London declared in its  announcement of the visit. A survey of the religious freedom decline in  the OSCE area, including in Kazakhstan, is at
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=806>.
 
 The Almaty Centre of the OSCE told Forum 18 on 21 November that its human  rights officer is monitoring the destruction of the commune.  An official of the Kazakh Embassy in the UK, who did not wish to be  identified as he was not authorised to speak to the media, acknowledged to  Forum 18 on 21 November that President Nazarbayev had promised to Hare  Krishna leaders on 11 September that he would look into the problems of  the commune and resolve them (see F18News 2 October 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=848>). "But if he promised  to consider the issue it doesn't mean that he would allow people to  violate the law, if they illegally built their homes." The official  declined to comment on how the Kazakh government's attack on religious  freedom reflected on its claims of religious tolerance, or on whether this  would harm the country's attempts to gain the chairmanship of the OSCE.
 
 President Nazarbayev's government often boasts of its claimed religious  tolerance, for example at a recent "Congress of Leaders of World and  Traditional Religions." 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>).
 
 
 
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