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Turkmenistan: "It Seems the Bad Times Are Coming Back" PDF Print E-mail

Source:         www.forum18.org

Date:            May 25, 2007

 


 
By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>
 
In what appears to be a growing crackdown on Protestants in Turkmenistan,
members of a Protestant church in a village near the north-eastern town of
Turkmenabad (formerly Charjew) had their houses raided and searched by
local officials and secret police on 20 May, Protestant sources who did not
wish to be identified for fear of reprisals told Forum 18 News Service. On
the following two days, public meetings were held where church members were
publicly humiliated and threatened.
 
The Protestants are members of an independent Turkmen-language church in
the village of Dogryyol (Bright Path) in Serdarabad district, 25 kms (15
miles) from Turkmenabad. The church is led by Pastor Rahim Borjakov.
 
Embarrassingly for the government, the raids and threats in Dogryyol
coincided with the visit to Turkmenistan of Christian Strohal, Director of
the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) of the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). During the
visit Ambassador Strohal met President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, when he
raised human rights concerns.
 
Forum 18 was unable to reach the office of the Foreign Minister, Rashid
Meredov, or the International Organisations Department of the Foreign
Ministry to find out how the latest attacks on freedom of thought,
conscience and belief fit with the pledges to work with the ODIHR on human
rights President Berdymukhamedov made to Ambassador Strohal. Telephones
went unanswered on 25 May.
 
Forum 18 was unable to reach the hakim, Muradov, or other officials at the
hakimlik (administration) of Serdarabad district on 25 May.
 
The head of the government's Gengeshi (Committee) for Religious Affairs,
Charygeldy Seryaev, said he had heard nothing about the raids and threats
to the Protestants in Dogryyol. He denied that anyone in Turkmenistan had
their religious rights restricted. "Whoever wants to can pray," he insisted
to Forum 18 from the capital Ashgabad [Ashgabat] on 25 May.
 
However, he declined to discuss any recent cases of persecution, including
the jailing of Baptist Vyacheslav Kalataevsky for three years in a labour
camp. The trial coincided with a visit to Turkmenistan of the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour (see F18News 14 May 2007
<http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=955>). Seryaev also refused
to or the arrest of another Baptist, Yevgeny Potolov, and the separate
seizing of furniture from his home as his wife Valentina refuses to pay a
fine for holding a worship service (see F18News 22 May 2007
<http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=960>).
 
Likewise, Seryaev of the Gangeshi for Religious Affairs professed
ignorance of the continued imprisonment of former Chief Mufti Nasrullah ibn
Ibadullah (see F18News 16 February 2007
<http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=914>). "I don't know where
he is," he maintained. "How can I know? I have only been in this job since
July 2006." He kept referring Forum 18 to the Gengeshi's deputy chair,
Murad Karriyev, though he denied that he was afraid to discuss such cases.
 
The official who then answered Karriyev's telephone said he was not
present, even though Seryaev had told Forum 18 he was there.
 
The raids in Dogryyol began on the evening of 20 May, when three or four
men dressed in official uniforms raided the home of a church leader. "They
searched the whole house obviously looking for something," Protestants told
Forum 18.
 
Then they moved on to a second leader's house in the village. The leader
told the men they could not search his house unless they showed a warrant.
"That's when one of the men said they were from the Ministry of State
Security (MSS) secret police. But the leader said he needed to see proof."
Then a larger group of men arrived to join the raid, including the hakim
(head) of the district administration, the head of the collective farm and
the local mullah. They threatened the leader and searched the house.
 
The final raid took place on the home of Pastor Borjakov. However, after
he refused absolutely to allow them inside his home without a warrant they
searched the outside and the roof. They also threatened him. Borjakov told
them that if they were looking for Christian literature he was prepared to
give them some. He then gave them some. "They threatened him with further
problems and then left," Protestants told Forum 18.
 
However, the following day the local authorities called a meeting of
children and parents at the village school, School No. 14. Protestant
parents were singled out and told that if they and their children did not
stop attending Protestant services their children would be expelled from
school. They were also threatened that electricity, gas and water supplies
would be cut off to their homes.
 
An even bigger public meeting was held on the evening of 22 May,
Protestants told Forum 18. The whole village population was summoned. The
meeting was led by hakimlik officials, with the collective farm chairman,
the MSS secret police, the ordinary police and the local mullah also
present.
 
"They read out the names of Christian parents, made them stand up and
berated them. Again they were threatened that power and water would be cut
off, that they would be sacked from their work and that they would not be
allocated land to cultivate. They accused the Christians of conducting
criminal activity and political activity against the government. They said
they would do whatever it takes to crush and destroy them."
 
Pastor Borjakov was allowed to address the meeting. "He explained that
Christians are not criminals and that Christian teaching is good,"
Protestant sources told Forum 18. "But then the authorities tried to shut
him up. He responded that as a citizen he had the right to speak. He told
them the Christians are citizens of Turkmenistan and simply practising
their rights. He also told them the church is on the way to getting state
registration. The evening finished with more threats, with officials
telling the Christians they could believe alone, but are banned from
meeting together."
 
Protestants told Forum 18 that in the wake of the public meetings and
threats, some non-Christian parents who had allowed their children to
attend services have now changed their minds. "This is all because of the
threats."
 
State attacks on Protestants have increased since the death of the former
President Saparmurat Niyazov last December (see F18News 21 December 2006
<http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=894>). "The church in
Dogryyol had not been touched for the last few years, but pressure has
mounted this year," Protestants told Forum 18.
 
Sources pointed out that public meetings to humiliate religious believers,
threats to expel religious believers from their work and cut off services,
and the involvement of mullahs in threats and harassment recall the
practice during the worst persecution from 1997 to 2003. "It seems the bad
times are coming back."
 
Protestant congregations - especially those made up of ethnic Turkmens or
of other minorities the government regards as being of Muslim background -
have been singled out for harassment. In Earlier this month, congregations
in Turkmenabad and Dashoguz have faced raids and questioning. In the
Caspian Sea port of Turkmenbashi (formerly Krasnovodsk), local Baptist
Vyacheslav Kalataevsky was given a three-year labour camp sentence on 14
May, while five days later another local Baptist Yevgeny Potolov was
arrested. Meanwhile, a Protestant from Dashoguz, Merdan Shirmedov, has been
denied permission to leave Turkmenistan since January to join his wife
Wendy Lucas in the United States. This meant he missed the birth of their
first child on 18 May (see F18News 22 May 2007
<http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=960>). (END)
 
For a personal commentary by a Protestant within Turkmenistan, on the
fiction - despite government claims - of religious freedom in the country,
and how religious communities and the international community should
respond to this, see <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=728>
 
For more background, see Forum 18's Turkmenistan religious freedom survey
at <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=672>
 
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>, and of religious
intolerance in Central Asia is at
<http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=815>.
 
A printer-friendly map of Turkmenistan is available at
<http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=turkme>
(END)

 

 

 

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