Human Rights problems

KAZAKHSTAN:

EXPELLED FOR "MISSIONARY ACTIVITY WITHOUT REGISTRATION"
 
 By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>

 

South Korean pastor Kim U Sob, who has led the Love Presbyterian Church in  the southern Kazakh town of Kyzyl-Orda [Qyzylorda] for the past eight  years, has been forced to leave the country, Aleksandr Klyushev of the  Association of Religious Communities of Kazakhstan told Forum 18 News  Service. The local Migration Police refused to allow the pastor to extend  his visa and remain in the country, after he was found guilty in June of  carrying out "missionary work without registration." Pastor Kim was  accredited to carry out missionary work in the town of Kyzyl-Orda, but not  in the wider region. "We accompanied the pastor to the aeroplane today," a  church member who preferred not to be identified told Forum 18 from  Kyzyl-Orda on 14 November.
 
 The head of the Migration Police for Kyzyl-Orda region, Amyrbek  Shaimagbetov, told Forum 18 that "with all the good will in the world" it  could not extend Kim U Sob's visa. "Under Kazakh law a foreigner has to  give a valid reason for an extended stay in Kazakhstan," he told Forum 18  on 14 November from Kyzyl-Orda. "The town akimat [administration] refused  Kim U Sob his missionary accreditation."
 
 Ibadullo Kuttykhojayev, deputy head of the Kyzyl-Orda Town Administration,  admitted to Forum 18 that it had refused Pastor Kim's registration. "By  law, we have to ask the law enforcement agencies about him before we can  give a missionary registration," he told Forum 18 from Kyzyl-Orda on 14  November. "The answer came back from the Internal Affairs Administration  for Kyzyl-Orda region that Kim U Sob had committed an administrative  offence, after engaging in missionary activity without registration.  Therefore we had to refuse him an extension to his missionary
 accreditation."
 
 Oddly, in view of the accusations against him, Pastor Kim was among  Kyzyl-Orda's religious leaders invited to speak at an official event in a  cultural centre, on 18 October, to mark the Day of Spiritual Unity and  Conciliation. This marks a 1992 Kazakh official "First Congress of  Spiritual Accord," and is a day officially claimed to celebrate the "full  rights" achieved by "religious people and communities," and the official  claim that "Kazakhstan is one of the first countries which managed to  transform the idea of spiritual accord into reality." A report of the  event remains on the Kyzyl-Orda regional administration website. The  accusations against and conviction of Pastor Kim violate international  human rights standards.
 
 Pastor Kim was accused of illegal missionary activity after police raided  the home of a church member he was visiting in Kyzyl-Orda region, outside  the town itself. "He did not even suspecting that friendly socialising  might be classed as missionary activity," one church member told Forum 18.  "However, the police suddenly burst into the house where he was staying and  filmed everyone present. The situation for believers' rights in Kazakhstan  is starting to resemble the 1930s. Recently the police were literally on  the pastor's heels."
 
 Klyushev reported that Kim was found guilty in June of carrying out  missionary work in the region without registration. He was then fined  approximately 20,000 Tenge (1,006 Norwegian Kroner, 122 Euros or 156 US  Dollars).
 
 In February 2005, Kazakhstan's President, Nursultan Nazarbayev, signed  "extremism" legal amendments, which restricted religious freedom. In July  2005, President Nazarbayev signed "national security" legal amendments,  which placed further substantial limitations on religious freedom. Under  the "national security" amendments, unregistered religious organisations  are banned in Kazakhstan and missionaries have to register with the local  authorities.
 
 Professor Roman Podoprigora, who specialises in Kazakh law as it affects  religion, notes that the issue of whether registration is obligatory or  not is disputed. "On the one hand, under the amendments to the law on  national security only followers of religions which are not registered in  Kazakhstan are regarded as missionaries. On the other, missionaries  seeking registration have to provide an invitation from a religious  organisation which is registered in Kazakhstan," he told Forum 18 from  Almaty. "So there is a fundamental contradiction in these amendments."
 
 Podoprigora said that in practice officials generally regard all foreign  clergy who come to Kazakhstan to preach as missionaries, even if they are  representatives of religious faiths that are registered in the country.  "Kim U Sob has become a victim of the view typically taken by officials,"  he commented to Forum 18.
 
 Further restrictions on religious freedom, through changes to Kazakhstan's  Anti-terrorism Law, are being planned for later in 2006 by the KNB secret  police (see 24 October 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=859>).
 
 In recent months, Protestants have told Forum 18 that they face increasing  restrictions on their activity especially in southern and western parts of  Kazakhstan (see eg. F18News F18News 2 October 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=848> and 24 October 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=859>).
 
 Foreign Christian preachers are not alone in facing difficulties. In a  growing number of cases, members of the Muslim international missionary  organisation Tabligh Jama'at have been prosecuted under the Code of  Administrative Offences and at least four who were foreign citizens have  been expelled from the country (see F18News 14 November 2006  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=868>).
 
 Members of the country's Hare Krishna community also face ongoing attacks  on their religious freedom by the government (see F18News 8 September 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=839>). (END)
 
 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>
 
 A survey of the religious freedom decline in the eastern part of the  Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) area is at <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=806> and a survey of  religious intolerance in Central Asia is at  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=815>.
 
 A printer-friendly map of Kazakhstan is available at <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=kazakh>
 
 

 Forum 18
 Postboks 6603
 Rodelokka
 N-0502 Oslo
 NORWAY