Human Rights problems

Forum18News: Belarus, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan

 


 20 December 2006
 BELARUS: MIXED STATE RESPONSE TO CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT PROTESTS
 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=893
 Catholics in Belarus have halted a hunger-strike, after receiving  endorsement for church construction from the Grodno city administration,  Forum 18 News Service has learnt. Parish priest Fr Aleksandr Shemet  stressed to Forum 18 that the Church has not received permission to build,  but permission to "gather documents" and "ask for final permission from the  President." Parishioners are praying for all Belarusian churches without a  building - including Minsk's New Life charismatic Church - and for the 12  Polish Catholic priests and nuns refused permission to work in Belarus  after 31 December 2006. "We want not only the Catholic Church, but all  Christians to be able to practise their religion freely," Fr Shemet  remarks. "So we will pray that believers are not afraid to demand their  rights." The 12 priests and nuns have been denied permission to continue  working in Belarus, despite appeals from 12,000 people including Catholic  bishops. New Life Church is supporting the Catholics of Grodno and praying  for a forthcoming court session, on whether moves to terminate New Life's  land rights and force the sale of its building are lawful.
 
 21 December 2006
 TURKMENISTAN: AFTER NIYAZOV, WHAT HOPE FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM?
 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=894
 Following today's (21 December) death of Turkmenistan's dictator,  Saparmurat Niyazov, victims of his policies have told Forum 18 News  Service that, in the words of an exiled Protestant, "the transition  leaders have already praised Niyazov and his policies and vowed to
 continue them." The country's Foreign Minister and other officials refused  to comment to Forum 18. Exiled human rights activist Farid Tukhbatullin, of  the Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights, noted that hostility to religious  freedom was a "personal instruction" of Niyazov. But "this does not mean  though that his subordinates were merely implementing his will," he said.  "Almost all of them shared his views on this entirely." He pointed out  that "the overwhelming majority of officials of the police and MSS secret  police have a vested interest in preserving the current situation, under  which they enjoy unlimited rights." It is unclear whether Niyazov's  invented Ruhnama religion will continue to be state-imposed.
 
  19 December 2006
 UZBEKISTAN: PRIME-TIME STATE TV INCITES INTOLERANCE OF RELIGIOUS
 MINORITIES AND RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=890
 Protestants across Uzbekistan have expressed great concern to Forum 18  News Service about two prime-time national TV attacks on Protestants and  Jehovah's Witnesses. "Almost the whole country watched it," one Protestant  - who preferred not to be named for fear of reprisals for talking publicly  about religious persecution - told Forum 18. "We were accused of  everything, including turning people into zombies and driving them to  psychiatric hospitals. Everyone points at us on the streets." The  programme openly encouraged religious intolerance and attacks on religious  freedom. Although they "had no impact on people without television or who  have satellite TV or Russian channels," one Tashkent Protestant told Forum  18. "But everyone else with only Uzbek channels who saw it was talking  about it. This has led to an increase of intolerance." The Protestant  believes the programmes were screened to prepare public opinion for  another clampdown on religious freedom.

 19 December 2006
 UZBEKISTAN: GOVERNMENT TRIES TO DENY RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REALITY
 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=891
 Uzbekistan increasingly claims that it is a country of religious  tolerance, where religious freedom is respected, Forum 18 News Service  notes. This is despite the state TV company's attacks on religious  tolerance and religious freedom, the persecution of independent Muslims,
 Protestants and Jehovah's Witnesses, and tight restrictions on members of  other communities. In an echo of Soviet-era practice, religious leaders  have increasingly been co-opted to support false claims of religious  freedom. A "non-governmental" opinion poll centre has claimed that it has  carried out a poll proving that "only" 3.9 percent of respondents had said  their religious rights are restricted in Uzbekistan. Marat Hajimuhamedov,  who was involved in the survey, laughed and declined to comment when Forum  18 asked him how the survey accorded with religious believers' experience  of police raids, fines, imprisonment and harassment of religious
 communities.
 
 20 December 2006
 UZBEKISTAN: GOVERNMENT ATTACKS ON PROTESTANTS, JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES AND  MUSLIMS CONTINUE
 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=892
 Uzbekistan's last legal Jehovah's Witness congregation is being threatened  with closure, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. If this happens, it would  make the faith illegal in the country and liable to harsh penalties. Also,  several Protestant churches have been closed in the past month, while  raids, fines and police interrogations continue. Some churches have had to  give up holding full church services and can meet only quietly in small  groups. On 18 December a Pentecostal in Tashkent was set upon by four men  and brutally beaten. "The local imams turned to the mafia and they became  involved," one Protestant told Forum 18. The attack follows state TV  encouragement of religious intolerance and attacks on religious freedom -  targeting Protestants and Jehovah's Witnesses in particular. Meanwhile,  further restrictions - for examples obstacles to the practice of daily  prayer - have been imposed on the Muslim population of the strongly  Islamic Fergana Valley area.
 

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