Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 21 – One of the most disturbing
but instructive aspects of the current regime in Russia is that while decisions
to move against this or that group are taken in Moscow, they are often first
implemented against that group in places far from the Russian capital, testing
the reaction of Russians and others and even “normalizing” repression.
That is clearly the case with the Jehoavh’s
Witnesses whose members and communities in distant parts of the Russian
Federation have been treated typically earlier and worse than in major cities
at least in part because groups in such faraway locations have fewer
opportunities to attract attention.
That makes what happens in such
places even more important to report because those who care about human rights
in Russia need to ensure that Moscow is never able to conclude that it can act
with complete impunity in places where there are no foreign embassies or
foreign journalists.
And because it often happens that
reports about what goes on in such places arrives long after the events described
even in this Internet age and thus is ignored by journalists and others as somehow
no longer news, it is important to report not only as a bellwether of larger
trends but also because people wherever they live deserve to have their rights
respected.
Today, the Jehovah’s Witness in
Russia reported on a case of repression that began two years ago in Kolyma, a region
of the Russian Far East best known if at all to the outside world because of
Varlam Shalmanov’s Kolyma Tales about the GULAG inmates there (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5EC624E4C249B§ion_id=4354A73076FEC).
Everything began two years ago when
the Magadan FSB opened a criminal case against 13 local Witnesses for supposed extremism. One of their number, Konstantin Petrov, 34, says
that he and the others were arrested by masked men and threatened with “serious
problems” if they did not cooperate with investigators.
He and three of those refused and
were confined in Magadan’s preliminary detention center, although they were
later released to home detention. They are thus victims of the same kind of official
violence that was visited on their ancestors there, whose mistreatment in
Stalin’s times is recalled them by a memorial to political repression.
Officials in Moscow claim that the
Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia aren’t being persecuted for their faith, although
what is going on out of public view beyond the ring road makes such claims ring
hollow, as does the fact that the European Court for Human Rights has accepted
appeals from members of the denomination.
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