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Two Baptist preachers
in Russia’s Baltic Sea exclave of Kaliningrad have been
fined after their community “sang psalms and spoke about
Christ” in the street, they have told Forum 18 News
Service. Speaking on condition of anonymity, a source in
the Kaliningrad police told Forum 18 that all public
gatherings – whether political or religious – must be
sanctioned by the municipal authorities in advance. “But
they didn’t have permission and they had no intention of
getting it!” he remarked, clearly irritated by the
Baptists’ actions. Asked why permission is necessary,
the source replied, “That’s the law in Russia!”
Aleksandr Legotin, one of the two Baptists, insisted
that, as the Baptists held a religious service and not a
demonstration, the legal requirement to notify the
authorities in advance should not have applied. “We
follow the law very carefully,” he told Forum 18. “And
under the Universal Declaration [of Human Rights] we
have the right to freedom of conscience – the law should
be doing the opposite, protecting us from such
arbitrariness.”
Two Baptist preachers in
Kaliningrad – Russia’s Baltic exclave bordered by the
European Union - were fined a total of 2,200 roubles
(424 Norwegian Kroner, 50 Euros or 73 US Dollars) on 25
September after their community “sang psalms and spoke
about Christ” in the street, they have told Forum 18
News Service.
Mikhail Alentyev and Aleksandr Legotin have not yet
decided whether to appeal against the fine, handed down
by a magistrate at Gusev Municipal Court for violating
regulations on holding public demonstrations (Article
20.2, Part 1 of the Administrative Violations Code),
Alentyev told Forum 18 from Kaliningrad on 29 September.
All public gatherings – whether political or religious –
must be sanctioned by the municipal authorities in
advance, a Kaliningrad police source speaking on
condition of anonymity told Forum 18 on 1 October. “But
they didn’t have permission and they had no intention of
getting it!” he remarked, clearly irritated by the
Baptists’ actions, while admitting they had not
disturbed public order. Asked why permission is
necessary, the source replied, “That’s the law in
Russia!” and pointed to Article 20.2 of the
Administrative Violations Code. He declined to comment
further.
Legotin insisted that, as the Baptists held a religious
service and not a demonstration, the legal requirement
to notify the authorities in advance should not have
applied. “We follow the law very carefully,” he told
Forum 18 from Kaliningrad on 1 October. “And under the
Universal Declaration [of Human Rights] we have the
right to freedom of conscience – the law should be doing
the opposite, protecting us from such arbitrariness.”
Under the 1997 Religion Law (Article 16, Part 5) public
religious gatherings come under the law on
demonstrations. But according to the 2004 Demonstrations
Law - which demands advance notification (not
permission) from organisers – religious gatherings are
regulated by the Religion Law (Article 1). Law
enforcement agencies are thus free to interpret as they
choose, and often understand notification as permission.
Alentyev commented to Forum 18 that his 30-strong Gusev
congregation “knows from experience” that the local
authorities will block its public evangelisation if they
do submit advance notification. The community belongs to
the Baptist Council of Churches, which broke away from
the Soviet-recognised Baptist Union in 1961 in protest
at regulations preventing missionary activity and
religious instruction to children. Its communities
refuse on principle to register with the authorities in
post-Soviet countries.
As the Gusev Baptists preached, sang, played musical
instruments and handed out gospels in the town’s centre
during their end-August evangelisation week, they were
disrupted by police four times. “They said, ‘What right
do you have to do this? Permission? No? Then down to the
police station!’” recalled Alentyev, who was detained
there for an hour on 3 September.
When likewise detained, Legotin tried to point to
religious freedom guarantees in international and
national law, as well as the 1993 Russian Constitution,
he told Forum 18, but one police officer retorted, “You
have the law, we have instructions!” He also said that
police accused the Baptists of being extremists.
According to an 18 September Council of Churches report,
police officers shouted at and ridiculed the Gusev
preachers, and threatened to shut them in a cellar when
they refused to sign statements.
Legotin and Alentyev both told Forum 18 this is the
first year they have been obstructed by the Kaliningrad
authorities. According to the Council of Churches
report, police detained and interrogated preachers in
Polessk in July. Ten days later, Legotin and a second
preacher were summoned to the municipal public
prosecutor’s office and told they were banned from
conducting religious activity in the district without
state registration.
In January, police disrupted evangelisation by some 25
Baptists, including Legotin, in Domnovo village (Pravdinsk
District). All were detained by police, who took their
names, home and work addresses, and interviewed minors
without their parents. They also accused the Baptists of
receiving funds from abroad and “parasitism” [“tuneyadstvo”],
an allegation commonly levelled at religious believers
and dissidents during the Soviet period. Legotin rejects
this charge. “I have two jobs,” he told Forum 18
indignantly. “We all work.”
Council of Churches communities consistently encounter
state opposition when they conduct public religious
activity. According to their 23 May report, a female
police officer in civilian clothes and several
unidentified men broke up evangelisation at Losevo
village market in Voronezh Region on 20 May, warning
that if the Baptists did not leave they would be beaten.
The preachers later received death threats from locals,
and one of their cars was set alight. Similar attacks
have taken place in other regions in previous years
Courtesy: Forum 18 News Service
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