IWPR
- 5 November 2002
Posted 6 November 2002 on RELIGIOSCOPE
The
criminal trial of a young Jehovah's Witness is being seen
as the latest attempt by the authorities to crack down on
non-traditional religious groups.
Tashkent
resident Marat Mudarisov is standing trial at the capital's
Akmal-Ikram district court accused of undermining the constitution
and spreading ideas that offend the national and religious
convictions of the Uzbek people.
He
is being charged under a law restricting religious freedom
and education, which was passed in May 1998 after a series
of confrontations between the state and fundamentalist Islamic
organisations such as the Wahhabi movement.
However,
this is the first time that spreading the teaching of the
Jehovah's Witnesses has been treated as a criminal offence
- all previous cases have been deemed administrative transgressions.
If convicted, Mudarisov faces up to eight years in prison.
The
case is now causing controversy after the accused's mother
testified that she was forced to sign a confession denouncing
her son after intense pressure from a state security official.
And
civil rights organisations have hit out at the authorities,
claiming that the trial is "a direct violation of
a person's right to religious freedom". Matilda Bogner
of Human Rights Watch told IWPR that she believes the Mudarisov
case is being used as a show trial, after the authorities
failed to stop Jehovah's Witnesses gaining popularity in the
predominantly Muslim state.
"When
the Uzbek authorities allowed the group to register in Fergana
and Chirchik, they didn't expect the movement to gain strength.
It is possible that this case was brought to a criminal court
to reduce its influence," she said.
Irina,
a young member of the religion who did not want to give her
full name, said that while official figures are not available,
there are believed to be around 3,500 Jehovah's Witnesses
in the capital alone.
Members
of the faith told IWPR that they believe the trial is intended
to frighten other young people away from them.
"In
the past, our members also faced charges but they only had
to pay fines. I think the authorities want to scare us, but
it will not make us turn our backs on our religion," she said," said Irina. The prosecution claims that
on July 20, 2002, National Security Service, NSS, officers
caught Mudarisov in possession of religious literature, Russian-language
books and an Uzbek-language brochure, which were deemed to "inflame religious and ethnic discord".
But
the defendant's mother Nuriya told IWPR that she had accompanied
her son to the local NSS office the previous day at the request
of an officer called Ilkhom Tulamov, who asked the accused
to bring examples of Jehovah's Witnesses' literature with
him. "We both went into Tulamov's office, and he told
us that he had summoned us because two people from the Jehovah's
Witnesses had written a denunciation of my son," she said. She claims that following "moral and physical
pressure" from the NSS official, she was then forced
to sign a statement condemning her son and his religious beliefs.
The
NSS then passed the case over to the Akmal-Ikram internal
affairs department, which then took the case to court.
The
defendant's lawyer Rustam Satdanov told IWPR that his client's
case has been marred by a number of procedural violations.
He said the NSS should have completed the investigation rather
than passing it on to another body and the court's decision
to keep Muradisov in custody throughout the trial was a breach
of his civil rights.
Analysts
fear that the Mudarisov case may be the start of a tougher
government line on non-traditional religious groups following
a series of crackdowns aimed at wiping out extremist Islamic
organisations.
The
activities of evangelical Christian groups operating in the
former Soviet republic have already been restricted, with
many denied official registration.
A
1998 law on freedom of conscience and religious organisations
forbids the mainly Sunni Muslim population from changing their
faiths, prevents religious education in schools or in private
homes, and requires all religions to have at least 100 members
before they're considered for official registration.
Following
a serious bombing incident in Tashkent on 1999 - which was
blamed on Islamic extremists - the authorities began to hunt
down and arrest those suspected of belonging to such groups.
This hard line approach resulted in an increase in the number
of Christian groups and their followers - which has further
alarmed the authorities.
Olga
Borisova