Human Rights problems

KAZAKHSTAN: PUNISHED FOR PREACHING IN MOSQUES
 
 By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 

As pressure increases on members of the international Islamic missionary  organisation Tabligh Jama'at across Kazakhstan, government officials have  denied to Forum 18 News Service that they regard the group as "extremist"  but say members have been punished for acting without state registration.  Tabligh members have been prosecuted and given heavy fines this year, with  some foreign missionaries being expelled.
 
 The deputy head of the Justice Ministry's Religious Affairs Committee,  Kairat Tulesov, said he does not believe Tabligh is an extremist religious  organisation. "The problem is that Tabligh is breaking the law by preaching  without first having registered," he told Forum 18 from the capital Astana  on 13 November. "Tabligh supporters simply have to observe Kazakh law and  then they can pursue their activities without hindrance."
 
 Askar Amerkhanov, the head of the National Security Committee secret  police's anti-terrorist centre, takes a similar view. "It is true that at  first we did have suspicions that Tabligh was an extremist organisation,"  he told Forum 18 from Astana on 13 ovember. "But having studied its  teachings we have concluded that it is simply an Islamic missionary  organisation. Tabligh's problem is that its supporters are preaching  without having registered with the authorities."
 
 Strangely, Kazakh Tabligh supporters do not tend to complain about the  authorities. "It is true that there have been cases where fines have been  imposed on our comrades in various parts of the country," Murad Mynbaev,  principal of the Astana Kazakh-Malaysian Islamic University, told Forum 18  in Almaty on 7 November. "But we do not believe this is deliberate state  policy. Rather, these are initiatives by the local authorities, who in  their ignorance think we are a political organisation. We emphatically do  not get involved in politics and it is not part of our tradition to  criticise the authorities."
 
 One Tabligh supporter, who preferred not to be named, argues that the  pressure from the authorities is simply playing into the hands of his  organisation's members. "If the police, or the law enforcement agencies,  did not arrest us, they would never know anything about our views," he  told Forum 18 in Almaty. "Now we have a unique opportunity to promote our  views among staff at the law enforcement agencies."
 
 In recent years, Kazakhstan has stepped up controls on all religious  activity. In 2005, drastic restrictions on religious freedom were  introduced in "extremism" and "national security" legal changes.  Provisions in Kazakhstan's laws punish religious communities that function  without official registration, with Baptists and other Protestants so far  bearing the brunt of such fines. Missionary activity by local and foreign  citizens without permission is subject to administrative fines, with  expulsion for foreigners. The authorities have also engaged in extra-legal  harassment of individual religious communities, such as of the Hare Krishna  commune near the country's commercial centre, Almaty (see F18News 8  September 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=839>).
 
 Some fear that proposed additions to the Religion Law will go further and  will ban sharing beliefs and missionary activity (see F18News 24 October  2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=859>).
 According to a Kazinform news agency report of 8 November, pressure on  members of Tabligh Jama'at continues in South Kazakhstan, Jambul [Zhambyl]  and Shymkent regions.
 
 In September the public prosecutor for Aktau, the administrative centre of  Mangistau region in western Kazakhstan, brought administrative proceedings  against Tabligh members, the Russian news agency Interfax reported. The  investigation found that 11 residents of the towns of Almaty, Aktobe  [Aqtobe] and Atyrau and of the Russian Federation had visited a mosque in
 the village of Kyzyl-Tobe and promoted the movement's views among the  local population. In cases brought by the prosecutors' office, five Kazakh  citizens have already been found guilty of breaking the Code of  Administrative Offences at a special administrative court, and were each
 fined 51,500 tenge (2,570 Norwegian Kroner, 314 Euros or 402 US dollars).
 
 In October, staff at the department for combating extremism, separatism  and terrorism at the internal affairs department in Aktobe region of  western Kazakhstan arrested seven people at the regional central mosque  under suspicion of belonging to the group. During preliminary questioning  the detainees admitted that they had gone to the region to "call people to  religious order within 40 days", the police reported. The group planned to  visit Aktobe, West Kazakhstan, Atyrau and Mangistau regions (which  together make up all of western Kazakhstan).

 In October law enforcement agencies arrested six members of Tabligh Jamaat  in Ekibastuz in Pavlodar region of north-western Kazakhstan for trying to  deliver a theological lecture at the local mosque. One of those arrested  was a resident of Pavlodar region, while the others had come to Ekibastuz  from the Almaty and East Kazakhstan regions. "The head of the group of
 detainees did not try to conceal his sympathies for the Tabligh Jama'at  movement and spoke openly about the religious views he was promoting,"  prosecutors told the Interfax news agency. They said the leader was found  guilty under Administrative Code Article 375, which punishes breaking the  law on religious organisations.

 In June officials from the department for combating extremism, separatism  and terrorism at the internal affairs department in Petropavlovsk  [Petropavl] in northern Kazakhstan arrested seven Tabligh supporters who  were delivering theological lectures in one of the town's mosques. The
 seven were found to have religious literature, including some in Arabic.  The police collected evidence against the Tabligh supporters and passed it  to the court, on the basis of which they were held to administrative  account and each fined 51,500 tenge. The Petropavlovsk police press office  told Interfax that the group's activity is now under special police  surveillance. At the same time, the police noted that it is impossible to  expel the Tabligh supporters from the region because they are Kazakh  citizens.
 
 Radio Liberty reported in the summer that a court in Karaganda  [Qaraghandy] in central Kazakhstan found four Kyrgyz citizens who were  Tabligh members guilty of promoting religious extremism. The Kazakh  authorities deported the four.
 
 Kazakhstan's deputy mufti, Muhamadhussein Asalbekov, says that the  state-backed Spiritual Administration of Muslims takes a "neutral stance"  on Tabligh. "Members of this movement have not appealed to us and so we  have no contact with them," he told Forum 18 in Almaty on 8 November. "We  have too little information about this organisation to draw any  conclusions."
 
 The Tabligh Jama'at movement (literally, a society for spreading faith) was founded in the 1920s in the Mewat region of India not far from Delhi.  Tabligh members firmly distance themselves from politics and see their  mission as promoting the ideas of Islam among Muslims. Although in some  countries people who were involved with Tabligh activities have become
 involved in terrorism, most commentators believe that the movement itself  rejects violence.
 
 

As well as in Kazakhstan, Tabligh is also relatively active in the other  Central Asian republics, where it has often attracted official concern.  Governments across the region try to maintain control of Islam through  state-approved Muslim Boards and try to restrict or suppress independent  Muslim activity outside the framework of these boards (see F18News 16
 February 2004 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=253>).
 

 In 2004, ten Tabligh members were sentenced to prison terms in Uzbekistan  after President Islam Karimov listed the group among "extremist  organisations" (see F18News 3 December 2004  <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=468>).
 
 Shamsybek Zakirov, adviser to the head of the Kyrgyz government's  Religious Affairs Committee, told Forum 18 that the movement is "very  active" in southern Kyrgyzstan. He said many Kyrgyz citizens have received  training at Tabligh's Pakistan headquarters and are now actively engaged in  missionary work in Kyrgyzstan. "All Tabligh supporters must by law  btain
 permission to work as missionaries from the muftiate's propaganda  department, but in practice many of them ignore that rule," Zakirov told  Forum 18 in Osh in September. "However, so far we have not taken any  action against these offenders. The most we can do is advise them to
 obtain a licence for missionary activity from the muftiate."
 
 Tabligh is not so active in Tajikistan. "There are very few Tabligh  members in our country and they maintain a very low level of activity,"  the head of the Islamic Revival Party of Tajikistan, Muhiddin Kabiri, told  Forum 18 from Dushanbe on 13 November. "The authorities are quite
 suspicious of their activity and try to keep them under control." However,  he said he had not received any complaints from Tabligh supporters.
 
 Tabligh is not reported to have been involved in Turkmenistan, a highly  isolationist state which is - after Uzbekistan - the most restrictive and  repressive of all the former Soviet republics.
 

 

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