The right to believe, to worship and witness
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The right to join together and express one’s belief
BELARUS: Top official says "no change" to harsh Religion Law
As a mass petition to amend the harsh 2002 Religion Law reaches 30,000 of a targeted 50,000 signatures, Vice-premier Aleksandr Kosinets has categorically rejected any changes to it. He was speaking at an unprecedented round table of religious leaders in Minsk on 19 September. "The Protestants suggested amendments, but he said that this is the law we have and it must be applied, it's final," Yakov Basin of the Religious Association of Progressive Jewish Communities, one of those present, told Forum 18 News Service. "It's clear that the state doesn't want to lose control over the religious life of the people." Kosinets also rejected the suggestion to introduce a category of "religious group" which would not need state registration. The law's stipulation that all religious activity without registration is illegal has led to raids, fines and detentions.
According to Basin, Kosinets categorically defended the 2002 Religion Law. "The Protestants suggested amendments, but he said that this is the law we have and it must be applied, it's final." Kosinets's responses to 34 questions elicited from religious representatives beforehand by the Plenipotentiary for Religious and Ethnic Affairs, Leonid Gulyako, were couched in terms of "what we can and can't do under the law," added Basin. "His position was that the confessions are violating the law."
Gulyako also spoke against changing the 2002 Law, Basin told Forum 18. When Protestant representatives suggested the introduction of a "religious group" status not requiring state registration, Gulyako claimed that their demands were not found in other European laws, with 50 people required for registration in Finland, for example. "He omitted to mention that this is not compulsory but only if you want a bank account," remarked Basin. Kosinets expressed doubts about the religious group status proposal, questioning who would lead such groups and whether they might know enough about religion to do so. This suggested to Basin the Soviet-era nature of Kosinets' attitude and signalled that the difference of understanding between the state and some religious representatives has not changed.
Religious Affairs Plenipotentiary Gulyako criticised the ongoing petition to change the 2002 Religion Law (see F18News 16 May 2007 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=957). "They said they don't want that, don't do it, we can resolve issues like this." The petitioners currently have some 30,000 signatures and intend to reach 50,000, Pastor Vyacheslav Goncharenko of New Life Church told Forum 18. Belarusian police have detained and confiscated literature from Catholics and Protestants petitioning to change the harsh 2002 Religion Law (see F18News 5 July 2007 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=989).
Among the 2002 Religion Law's many restrictions are compulsory state registration for religious communities, a minimum membership of 20 and a limitation of religious activity to the location where a community is registered (see F18News 7 October 2003 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=154 and 13 October 2003 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=162).
During the meeting Kosinets complained about the presence in Belarus of foreign religious leaders, a comment widely viewed as targeted at the Catholic Church, though other religious communities would also to be affected. He also criticised some religious communities for failing to keep up historic places of worship (see F18News 1 October 2007 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1027).
After stating that Kosinets was unavailable for comment on 26 September, his assistant directed Forum 18 to Gulyako, the Plenipotentiary for Religious and Ethnic Affairs. However, Gulyako's telephone was engaged whenever Forum 18 rang on 26 September and went unanswered on 27 September.
In a 26 September statement to the Human Dimension Implementation Meeting of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) in Warsaw, Yuri Uralsky of the office of the Plenipotentiary for Religious and Ethnic Affairs defended the government's religious policy. "Belarusian law allows Belarusian citizens to realise the right to freedom of conscience and belief and to function fully as religious organisations," he insisted.
Both Basin and Pastor Vyacheslav Goncharenko of the Minsk-based New Life Church, who heads the charismatic Full Gospel Association, noted that the recent round table at the new National Library is the first at which a senior government official has brought religious leaders together as a single group. The approximately 20 who attended appear to have represented religious organisations with a republic-wide official presence; Orthodox, Old Believer, Roman Catholic, Baptist, Pentecostal, Seventh-day Adventist, Jehovah's Witness, Muslim and Jewish, but not Hare Krishna or Messianic Jewish.
Vice-premier Kosinets reportedly remarked that "the president has an interest in the religious sphere" and announced that similar meetings would take place twice a year. Following Kosinets' lengthy presentation and responses to the previously submitted questions, there was plenty of opportunity to raise other questions and then to speak informally with the vice-premier, Pastor Goncharenko reported.
It is so far unclear whether the round table will result in any improvement for religious communities. Pastor Goncharenko's impression was that the state "doesn't want any sharp corners". Vice-premier Kosinets criticised the 2006 hunger strike by New Life Church members in defence of their building (see F18News 20 October 2006 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=858).
After it was pointed out that religious communities are adopting extraordinary measures because their problems are not being resolved, according to Basin, Vice-premier Kosinets suggested a compromise in the situation surrounding New Life's building. Pastor Goncharenko told Forum 18 that, in response to Kosinets' order to sort the situation out, Gulyako arranged to visit New Life's church on 26 September. Cited in a 26 September report of the visit on New Life's website, Gulyako stated: "I consider it my professional duty to come and see what sort of a building this is, what condition it is in. I see that the building has been put in order and favourable conditions have been created for people to be in it."
The state has long denied New Life Church permission to worship in its own building, a disused barn, and came close to confiscating it in late 2006 (see F18News 20 October 2006 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=858). A court case to resolve the issue has been adjourned indefinitely (see F18News 12 March 2007 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=930).
However, when Protestant representatives complained about the brief imprisonment of Pentecostal Pastor Antoni Bokun this summer for leading worship without state permission, according to Goncharenko, Kosinets insisted that this was "a political issue" (see F18News 28 May 2007 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=964 and 5 June 2007 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=969). (END)
For more background information see Forum 18's Belarus religious freedom survey at http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=888.
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.
A printer-friendly map of Belarus is available at http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=europe&Rootmap=belaru
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14 September 2007
BELARUS: Baptist fined for church family holiday
A state official has defended as lenient a fine of almost two weeks' average wages imposed on the Baptist Viktor Orekhov for organising a church summer holiday. "What European country would tolerate a group of people doing what they like, completely ignoring the state and law, not responding to the authorities' comments?" religious affairs official Vasili Marchenko told Forum 18 News Service. Baptists in the south-western Brest Region were denied permission to rent leisure facilities they had used in earlier years. After they went ahead in June with a camp on private land, police invaded the camp to question the children and threatened to close it by force. Orekhov was fined on 24 August for the creation or leadership of a religious organisation without state registration. "We are to blame, it seems, for being believers," Orekhov pointed out. "This is why I was prosecuted and fined." This is the first significant fine in over a year to be handed down to a member of the Baptist Council of Churches in Belarus. In July an ideology official tried to break up a charismatic church's summer camp.
17 July 2007
BELARUS: Ideology official attempts to disband church camp
A regional Ideology Department official in Belarus has tried to break up a family holiday camp for members of a Minsk charismatic church, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. Oleg Bobrik demanded that all religious activity and distribution of religious literature cease, church member and lawyer Dina Shavtsova told Forum 18, "even though there wasn't any literature." The local district executive committee [local council] had given written permission for the family holiday camp, but Bobrik claimed that the camp did not conform to either the Religion Law or an Education Ministry instruction regulating health camps. Bobrik then issued an order – handwritten in ballpoint pen on plain paper – ordering the camp to be closed down unless certain points were resolved. These included a list of participants being provided, but "no one is prepared to give him [Bobrik] a list of participants, as that is unlawful," Shavtsova told Forum 18. "And we'll carry on the camp, of course." The family holiday camp continued as planned. Bobrik has refused to answer Forum 18's questions about his actions.
5 July 2007
BELARUS: Religious freedom campaigners detained
Belarusian police have, within two days, detained 19 Catholics and Protestants petitioning to change the harsh 2002 Religion Law. The detentions happened after signatures were collected at a prominent Catholic pilgrimage site, Budslav, and in the capital Minsk. One of those held, Sergei Lukanin, told Forum 18 News Service from Minsk's Frunze District Police Station that he and five other campaigners were "sitting in an office with three policemen who refuse to allow us to leave or to explain why we are here." Two of those detained, 16-year-old Feodora Andreyevskaya and 14-year-old Yuliya Kosheleva, were held as they collected campaign materials on freedom of thought, conscience and belief. Also detained was Denis Sadovsky, secretary of the Belarusian Christian Democracy movement. Much literature was confiscated by police and has not been returned. This included 7,000 newsletters and 500 copies of a booklet, "Monitoring Violations of the Rights of Christians in Belarus in 2006," detailing religious freedom violations reported by independent Belarusian media sources and Forum 18 News Service. Petitions to change the law require at least 50,000 signatures to be considered by the Constitutional Court, and over 25,000 signatures have so far been collected.