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A ‘Dire Time for Human Rights in Russia’ as World Cup Begins

  • World Watch Monitor Religious persecution, missions, Christianity around the world
  • Updated Jun 14, 2018

The 2018 FIFA World Cup started today with a match between Saudi Arabia and the host nation Russia at the Luzhniki stadium in Moscow.

“This is a very dire time for human rights in Russia,” according to the Russia programme director for Human Rights Watch, Tanya Lokshina, speaking ahead of the start of the 2018 Football World Cup, which kicked off in Moscow earlier today.

Since Vladimir Putin became Russia’s president again in 2012 there has been a “staggering human rights clampdown”, she told the Australian Associated Press last week.

“What we see in Russia today, as far as freedom of expression is concerned, is just devastating,” she said. “Every year it is just getting worse.”

“There is no sign that … persecution of religious minorities and foreign missionaries is coming to an end.”

However, she said the World Cup may at least shine a light on the abuses: “Russia being in the spotlight, so many fans coming from all around the world, so many media publications… It’s all going to make people focus on the profound human rights crisis in Russia.”

Among the challenges facing Russians is the clampdown on religious freedom since the introduction two years ago of the so-called “anti-missionary law”.

Under this law, prosecuted individuals face heavy fines, up to six years in prison, and, for foreigners, deportation.

An American missionary, Donald Ossewaarde, who was based in the Russian city of Oryol, was one of the first convicted under the law. In March 2017, he filed an application to the European Court of Human Rights arguing that his right to religious freedom had been violated by the law after he was found guilty of conducting “illegal missionary activities”. He had been holding weekly Bible meetings at his home for 14 years before the introduction of the law.

Following his application to the court last year, Ossewarde wrote on his blog: “Russia may or may not respect the ECHR’s decision if it finds a violation in my case, but it would be an embarrassment to them, and might result in an amendment to the law. Filing the case puts international pressure on Russia.”

Ossewaarde left the country after his unsuccessful appeals in Russia, and the ECHR approached the Russian government in July last year with a number of questions, though regional news agency Forum 18 said last month that it is not yet known whether the government has responded.

“There is no sign that … persecution of religious minorities and foreign missionaries is coming to an end,” the United States Ambassador to the Vatican, Callista Gingrich, said yesterday (13 June) during a roundtable discussion on the Ukraine, held at the US embassy in Rome.

“Today, Russia ranks among the worst violators of religious freedom and human rights,” she said, as reported by Catholic newspaper The Tablet.

In February the US Commission on International Religious Freedom criticised the so-called “anti-missionary law” – officially titled the Yarovaya Law, after one of its authors – which was formally introduced as an anti-terrorism measure in July 2016, saying “vague and problematic definitions of ‘extremism’ in Russian law give the authorities wide latitude to interfere in peaceful religious observance and persecute believers”.

Longest known sentence for religious meeting

A court in Russia recently handed down the longest known jail term for a religious meeting in the country.

A Muslim man, Ilgar Aliyev, was sentenced on 28 May by a court in the Dagestan republic to eight years in jail and two years of restrictions for “leading and involving others” in the study of books written by the late Turkish theologian Said Nursi.

According to Forum 18, “law enforcement typically interprets this as continuing the activity of the banned extremist organisation ‘Nurdzhular’, which Muslims in Russia deny even exists”.

The longest known sentence previously for such a meeting was four years’ imprisonment. Aliyev has appealed the sentence but remains in detention.

In February, the Islamic State group claimed an attack on a Russian Orthodox Church in Kizlyar, Dagestan, in which five people were killed and five others were injured.

‘Cry of despair’

Meanwhile, at least 30 Jehovah’s Witnesses have been charged for criminal activities in Russia in the last six months, according to Forum 18.

“The law enforcement crackdown on Jehovah’s Witnesses across Russia is gathering pace,” the news agency said. “Law enforcement agencies launched multiple armed raids in another four regions in the space of a week in late May and early June, followed by lengthy interrogations and detentions.”

Last year Russia outlawed the group, shutting down its administrative centre and 395 local congregations, and seizing assets.

The wives of Jehovah’s Witnesses who have been imprisoned wrote an open letter to Russia’s Council on Human Rights last week, which they called their “cry of despair”.

World Cup concerns

Seven of the 32 competing teams in the World Cup come from countries that can be found on the 2018 Open Doors World Watch List of the 50 countries where it is most dangerous countries to live as a Christian.

The charity says that Christians in Iran, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Tunisia, Mexico and Colombia “are not free to live out their faith without facing persecution – whether that be rejection, isolation, denial of rights and freedom, or even violence”.

Russia, meanwhile, is on Open Doors’ list of “Persecution Watch Countries” beyond the top 50.

 

The post A ‘dire time for human rights in Russia’ as World Cup beginsappeared first on World Watch Monitor.

Photo courtesy: ©Thinkstock/Murat Göçmen

Publication date: June 14, 2018