Human Rights problems


 KAZAKHSTAN: MORE LIMITS TO RELIGIOUS FREEDOM PLANNED?
  By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 Tuesday 24 October 2006
 

Kazakhstan's National Security Committee (KNB) secret police is preparing  changes to the Anti-terrorism Law, "but these changes are not going to  affect believers," Askar Amerkhanov, Deputy Chief of Staff of the KNB's  Anti-terrorist Centre has told Forum 18 News Service.
 
 This, however, contradicts remarks Amerkhanov made to the news agency  Kazakhstan Today on 15 September. At that time, he was reported as saying  that a draft law would come before parliament before the end of 2006 and  that it would tackle the so-called destructive sects and organisations,  the activity of which is banned in a number of countries because they  "exert a destructive influence on people's personalities," he claimed.  According to Amerkhanov in September, those targeted by the draft law  would include the Korean Grace Protestant church and the Jehovah's  Witnesses.
 
This report "simply distorted my views," Amerkhanov told Forum 18 on 23  October. He went on to state that the Kazakh Supreme Court has not found  the Jehovah's Witnesses or the Grace Church to be destructive  organisations or terrorist groups.
 
 Agreeing with Amerkhanov's latest comments on these religious communities,  Amanbek Mukhashev, Deputy Head of the Justice Ministry's Religious Affairs  Committee told Forum 18 that "Neither the Jehovah's Witnesses nor the  Grace Church is a destructive organisation. There are 12 international  organisations that have been recognised as destructive entities - such as  Al Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood and other such organisations." Speaking  to Forum 18 on 23 October, Mukhashev stated that "there are no Christian  organisations on that list. Kazakhstan is a law-governed state and only  the court can decide whether an organisation is a destructive sect."
 
 Mukhashev also said that he did not know anything about preparations for  changes and additions to the Anti-terrorism Law, though he admitted that  in 2007 Kazakhstan's parliament will be drawing up amendments to the  Religion Law. "The need to modernise the Religion Law arose long ago, but  I do not think the deputies will introduce an article into the law that  will ban missionary activity and proselytism," said Mukhashev.
 
 A Protestant source who preferred not to be named told Forum 18 of  suspicions that the additions to be introduced into the Religion Law will  ban sharing beliefs and missionary activity in Kazakhstan.
 
 In 2005, Kazakhstan introduced drastic legal religious freedom  restrictions in "extremism" and "national security" legal changes (see the  F18News religious freedom survey at
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=701>).
 
 The assurances of the KNB's Amerkhanov were greeted with scepticism by the  head of the Almaty Helsinki Committee, Ninel Fokina. "We know who to  believe!" she told Forum 18 on 23 October. "Fortunately for us, the KNB  secret police sometimes let things slip, and then deny what they said.  However, in our experience there have not yet been any cases where these  'slips of the tongue' have not been proved correct. We will not find out  what the KNB has thought up until its amendments to the "anti-terrorism"  law reach parliament," she said.
 
 Aleksandr Klyushev, chairman of the Association of Religious  Organisations, told Forum 18 that he was "very anxious" about the proposed  additions to the Anti-terrorism Law. "Clearly, the proposed amendments will  put Protestant churches in a very difficult position," he told Forum 18  from Astana on 20 October.
 

 "We have head about Amerkhanov's statement, and of course it has made us  very concerned. However, at least so far, we do not have any problems with  the authorities," Fedor Zhitnikov, head of the Jehovah's Witness community  in Kazakhstan, told Forum 18.
 
 Overall, it seems clear that the situation of the Protestant religious  minority, along with other religious minorities, is deteriorating (see        F18News 8 September 2006 ). Franz Tiessen, head of the Kazakh Baptist        Union, told Forum 18 that not only Council of Churches Baptist
 congregations, who refuse on principle to register with the state in  former Soviet states, but also some member congregations of his Union face  fines after being unable to get local registration (see F18News 9 June 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=797>).
 
 "Officials keep saying they want us to register our congregations, but in  some places officials just drag their feet," Tiessen told Forum 18 on 16  October. "Some have been waiting for half a year or more. We're not  against registration." He said this was a particular problem for small
 congregations, especially in southern regions, including Jambyl [Zhambyl]  and Chimkent [Shymkent] regions. He said that "about four or five" church  members have each been fined about 13,000 or 20,000 Kazakhs Tenges (680 or  1,000 Norwegian Kroner, 80 or 125 Euros, or 100 or 150 US Dollars) in 2006,  because their congregations were functioning without registration. Average  monthly salaries have been estimated to be roughly equivalent to 31,500
 Tenge (1,600 Norwegian Kroner, 200 Euros, or 260 US Dollars).
 
 Zhambyl, Chimkent and Atyrau regions are blackspots for registering  Protestant churches, a Protestant pastor who preferred not to be named  told Forum 18. He said one Pentecostal church in Chimkent finally got  registration as a branch of a church in Almaty in spring 2006, two and a
 half years after first applying. "If they see the pastor has a Kazakh name  there are always problems," he told Forum 18 (see F18News 14 July 2006
 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=812>).
 
 The pastor described the pressure on Protestants especially in these  regions as "persecution". "Those who adopt Christianity are under strong  pressure, both from relatives and from officials," he said.
 

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