Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: All

December 3, 2006

Note: The following text is a quote:

Jeremy Reynalds, Ph.D.
P O Box 27693
Alb., NM 87125
Tel: (505) 400-7145

Uzbekistan Court Fines Baptists and Orders Bibles to be Burned

Following a raid in late Aug. in southern Uzbekistan, two visiting Baptists were heavily fined for taking part in unregistered religious worship. Four local church members were slapped with smaller fines.

Forum 18 News Service reported that it was told by sources the court also ordered Bibles and hymn books confiscated during the Aug. 27 raid in the town of Karshi to be burned, a regular practice with literature confiscated during raids – despite official denials.

The two visitors were fined 540,000 sums, or $438 U.S., a huge amount by local standards.

Uzbekistan is located in Central Asia, north of Afghanistan.

Forum 18 reported that Judge Alisher Jalilov of the town's criminal court fined the Baptists under Article 240 of Uzbekistan's Code of Administrative Offences, which punishes “breaking the law on religious organizations.” Those fined are members of the Council of Churches Baptists, whose members reject registration in all the former Soviet republics where they operate, as they contend it leads to unwarranted state interference in their communities' internal religious life.

The top fines of 540,000 sums fines represent huge sums in Uzbekistan, where the minimum monthly wage is less than 12,000 sums, and the average monthly wage in Karshi is less than 60,000 sums. Usually, courts only rarely sentence believers to fines of more than 120,000 sums for operating without registration. However, Forum 18 reported that even two years ago believers in Karshi are on record as having been fined more than 240,000 sums.

On Nov. 17 Forum 18 reached Judge Jalilov in Karshi to find out why he had imposed such large penalties on religious believers exercising their constitutional rights. However, Forum 18 reported the judge refused to discuss the case with the news service by telephone.

No one from the government's Religious Affairs Committee would speak to Forum 18. Aziz Obidov, the former press officer for the committee, has now joined the Foreign Ministry and other officials at the committee refused to speak to Forum 18.

However, in earlier conversations with Forum 18, the news service reported Religious Affairs Committee officials stressed several times that the Bible is permissible literature in Uzbekistan and that no books may be burned under Uzbek law.

“The Bible is legally permitted literature and may be distributed freely throughout Uzbekistan,” Begzot Kadyrov, senior specialist at the Committee, told Forum 18 a number of months ago. “As far as other imported literature is concerned, the relevant church must receive our committee's permission to import it. However, even unlawfully imported literature that arrives in Uzbekistan is not burned, but is sent back to the country from which it came.”

But despite these claims, Forum 18 reported, it is common practice for the Uzbek authorities to burn literature, including Bibles, that has been confiscated from members of unregistered religious communities (see F18News www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=643).

This year government censorship of religious literature has been intensified (see F18News www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=805), while massively increased fines for unregistered religious activity were introduced at the end of 2005 (see F18News www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=720).

The prosecution of the six Baptists followed a raid on the church by local police on Sun. Aug. 27 while the congregation was hosting a visit by fellow-Baptists from Tashkent and Fergana, Baptist sources told Forum 18. The news service reported the six were taken to the police station to be interrogated. There they were pressured to apply for registration for the congregation (although two of the six were visitors, not congregation members) and pressured to write statements. All six refused to write statements for the police. The police filmed the interrogation against the wishes of the Baptists. The six were not freed until late in the evening.

Forum 18 reported the Baptists called for the revocation of the punishments against the six, as well as calling for Uzbekistan's strict religion law to be brought into line with the religious freedom guarantees in the country’s Constitution and international human rights standards.

The persecution of religious minorities also continues in other areas of Uzbekistan, Forum 18 reported. On Nov.18 the criminal court for Chilanzar district of the capital Tashkent found Pentecostal Christian Risto Dyachkov guilty under Article 240 of the Code of Administrative Offences. He was fined 60,000 sums.

The prosecution followed a Nov. 13 raid on his Pentecostal church by 30 local police officers, led by Lieutenant-Colonel Aleksandr Shishkov. One Protestant complained to Forum 18, the news service reported, that police “illegally” confiscated 133 videotapes, 379 audiotapes, a DVD and CD’s, as well as 30 Christian books, including copies of the Bible and New Testament. Several young people were forced “under threat of violence” to go to the police station to write statements.

The church's pastor, Serik Kadyrov, was also threatened with prosecution. When church members complained to Shishkov that he was smoking inside the church, Forum 18 reported he replied, “It may be a church to you, but to me it's nothing. I'll smoke where I like.”

Meanwhile, Protestant sources have told Forum 18 that on Nov.3, the Justice Department for the Tashkent region issued an official warning to Full Gospel Church pastor Vyacheslav Bely, who leads a Full Gospel Pentecostal congregation in Yangiyul near Tashkent. Officials claim that the church needs to re-register its statute within a month, otherwise registration will be stripped from the congregation.

Sources told Forum 18 that such speedy re-registration is next to impossible, and termed the demand “illegal.” Under Uzbekistan's religion law, if the congregation is stripped of registration, any activity it then carries out is illegal.

Despite these and other recent government attacks on religious communities - including Muslims, Christians, Jehovah's Witnesses and others - Forum 18 reported the Uzbek authorities have recently been trying to defend their record, claiming to uphold religious freedom.

For more background, see Forum 18's Uzbekistan religious freedom survey at www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=777.


100 posted on 12/03/2006 7:55:11 PM PST by Cindy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 99 | View Replies ]


To: Cindy; All

I hope this is not a report...

US-CERT: Al Qaeda Plotting Financial Attacks

Terrorist network Al Qaeda may be planning to launch online attacks against U.S. financial institutions, according to the U.S. Computer Security Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT).

US-CERT, part of the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS), issued the situational awareness alert Thursday to financial institutions and said they could be targeted in denial-of-service and database attacks as soon as Friday.

Islamist Web sites have increasingly focused on issues related to IT security, according to the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), a Washington-based independent think that that monitors Islamist Web sites and provides translated news and analysis.

In late November, an Islamist Website published the inaugural issue of Technical Mujahid, an online magazine that focuses on subjects such as database security, GPS and video editing, MEMRI said.

According to MEMRI, the magazine gives the following explanation of its purpose: "The Internet provides a golden opportunity ... for the mujahideen to break the siege placed upon them by the media of the Crusaders and their followers in the Muslim countries, and to use [the Internet] for [the sake of] jihad and the victory of the faith."

Terrorist cyberattacks have largely been the subject of academic discussion as opposed to being an issue that organizations are actively considering, said Ted Julian, vice president of marketing and strategy at Application Security, New York.

Regardless of whether this threat is genuine, organizations need to move database security to the top of their list of security priorities, Julian added. "Database security has long been overlooked. Five years ago, there weren't threats, but now it's quite clear that they've become an obvious target for attackers," he said.

Johannes Ullrich, chief research officer at the SANS Institute's Internet Storm Center, said the potential impact of denial-of-service attacks is significant because they're relatively simple to carry out with the assistance of large botnets, or legions of compromised PCs controlled by remote attackers.

"Denial-of-service attacks aren't easy to defend against. Buying more bandwidth and having a large pipe can mitigate the attacks, but if the pipe leading up to the device is saturated, there's little that can be done [to stop them]," Ullrich said.

Denial-of-service attacks have been used in the past for political aims. In a 1998 protest against the Mexican government, a Zapatista National Liberation Army insurgency group launched attacks against the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, the
Pentagon and the Web site for Mexican President Ernest Zedillo that involved urging its supporters to download FloodNet, a denial-of-service attack tool.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20061203/tc_cmp/196601093


122 posted on 12/04/2006 12:22:47 PM PST by tmp02
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 100 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson