The owner of an apartment used by a Baptist church in the
eastern city of Turkmenabad (formerly Charjou), Yeldash Roziev, has been given
a heavy fine for allowing his home to be used for worship. The church, which
mainly serves deaf and dumb Baptists, was raided by the authorities during a
prayer meeting on 13 June (see F18News 18 June 2003). All those who attended
were fined on 19 June, reports a statement from local Baptists reaching Forum
18 News Service. Officials declined to explain to Forum 18 why the Baptists had
been fined for meeting for worship in a private home.
The Baptists were summoned to attend an administrative commission at the city
administration, where Roziev was fined 500,000 manats (668 Norwegian kroner, 82
Euros or 94 US dollars) for allowing his home to be used for a religious
meeting. The commission also threatened to take away his apartment. All the
other Baptists were fined 250,000 manats each. The commission ordered the
Baptists to sign the decree certifying the fine, but they refused to do so.
"The documents were then thrust into their hands and they were threatened
that if they did not sign them they would be imprisoned for 15 days,"
church members reported in the 19 June statement. Aleksandr Frolov was again
threatened with being expelled from the country.
All those fined are deaf and dumb (apart from Roziev), and each receives a
monthly invalidity benefit of 300,000 manats. "The administrative
commission also threatened that police officers would visit them in their homes
every day to check what they were doing."
Forum 18's attempts to establish whether the authorities regarded this as
normal practice in Turkmenistan were in vain. Reached on 24 June, the assistant
head of Turkmenabad city administration, Davlet Yekuly declared that "he
knew nothing about what had happened to the Baptists". He also refused to
give Forum 18 the telephone numbers of members of the administrative
commission. Forum 18's attempt to find out from the city procuracy why the
Baptists had been fined was also fruitless. "Why do you keep on
telephoning us!?" assistant procurator Mukhamad Tashliev told Forum 18 on
24 June. "We never have and never will give any information over the
telephone!"
The Turkmenabad Baptist church was the tenth religious community known to have
been raided by the authorities since the latest crackdown on religious
minorities began in early May. On 13 June, 11 officials, including two in army
uniform, raided a prayer meeting being held in Roziev's apartment. During the
subsequent interrogation, Roziev and Frolov were threatened with a twelve-year
prison term. Officers also tried to recruit Roziev as a spy within the church.
Turkmenistan has the harshest religious policy of all the former Soviet
republics. No faiths except for the officially-sanctioned Muslim Board and the
Russian Orthodox Church have been allowed to register any communities. The
government treats all unregistered religious activity as illegal. Baptists,
Pentecostals, Adventists and other Protestants, as well as the Armenian
Apostolic Church, the Lutherans, the Jews, Hare Krishna communities, Jehovah's
Witnesses, Baha'is and others are thus denied the opportunity of worshipping
legally.
Since May, pressure on religious minorities has intensified with a series of
apparently coordinated raids in six different locations on various communities,
including Baptist and Pentecostal churches, as well as Hare Krishna communities
(see F18News 10 June 2003). In all these cases, the police burst into private
apartments where representatives of religious minorities had gathered, and took
them to the police station