Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 27 – New
amendments for the Russian law on freedom of conscience now being prepared by
the justice ministry establish in fact “a system of total [government] control
over religious organizations” in the Russian Federation, according to Roman
Lunkin.
Lunkin, an expert on law and religion
at the Institute of Europe of the Russian Academy of Sciences, says that “the
phobias of the bureaucracy about public initiative and the religious variety of
the country are leading to the disappearance of religious organizations
(non-Orthodox above all) from public life” (sova-center.ru/religion/publications/2014/11/d30731/).
This system of control, he
continues, involves not only the issue of identifying any foreign sources of
income that religious groups may have and the possibility that they will be
classified as “foreign agents” but also from other parts of the proposed
amendments to the existing law.
They individually and collectively,
Lunkin says, open the way for massive, repeated and unannounced inspections of
religious groups if the authorities believe that the latter are not providing
the information they are supposed to.
That perhaps will not disturb many groups who believe that they are
being perfectly transparent.
But they and others who may not be
are not to be the judge of that. Instead, the authorities are, and any
religious group the authorities want to inspect can fall victim. That is
especially likely to be the case for Muslims and for the so-called “non-traditional”
religions and groups like the Salvation Army, various Christian missionaries,
and the Scientologists.
“There is no good sense” in any of
this, Lunkin says, and consequently, official monitoring of religious groups to
the point of harassment will continue.
While “Russia has avoided the path of the Central Asian states which
harshly block the activities of religious groups,” it is using law to limit
their activities in ways that strike their rights and core values.
Because a religious group cannot get
official registration without clearing the hurdles that the new law imposes as
far as declarations about sources of income, none will receive it except “as a
political indulgence” that is likely to be given only to the Russian Orthodox
Church and others that keep close to the official line.
“It is possible,” Lunkin concludes, that
the Russian justice ministry doesn’t like the idea of registering any group and
“doesn’t want to see any more.” The new amendments may even make that likely.
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