El Dorado News-Times

Russian court sends Jehovah's Witness to prison for 6 years

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MOSCOW (AP) — A regional court in western Russia on Wednesday sentenced a Danish Jehovah's Witness to six years in prison, in arguably the most severe crackdown on religious freedom in Russia in recent years.

The court in Oryol found Dennis Christense­n guilty of extremism, making him the first Jehovah's Witness in Russia to be sent to prison.

Christense­n was detained during a police raid on a local prayer meeting he was leading in May 2017.

"I do not agree with this judgment, it's a big mistake," Christense­n told reporters after the sentencing in the city of Oryol. His wife Irina Christense­n added: "I'm really sad that such a thing is happening in Russia, very sad. The same thing could happen to any of us."

The verdict was met with consternat­ion around the world including from the U.S. Embassy, which expressed its concern and urged Russia to respect individual's religious freedom.

Russia in recent years has used its vaguely worded extremism laws to go after dissenters, opposition activists and most recently religious minorities. Russia officially banned the Jehovah's Witnesses in 2017 and declared the religious group an extremist organizati­on.

Nearly 100 members of the group face charges in Russia, and more than 20 of them are in jail awaiting trial. Before the ban, the world headquarte­rs of the Jehovah's Witnesses claimed about 170,000 adherents in Russia.

Paul Gillies, spokesman for Jehovah's Witnesses, said in an emailed statement that Christense­n did not commit any crime and that he was convicted "merely for practicing his Christian faith."

"This verdict reveals just how fragile religious freedom has become in Russia," Gillies said.

The religious group got a glimmer of hope in December when President Vladimir Putin publicly pledged to look into the reported persecutio­n of Jehovah's Witnesses, calling extremism charges against the religion's adherents "nonsense."

But Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov, when asked about the case after the verdict, was unable to say if Putin had looked into the matter and had no comment on the ruling Wednesday.

U.S. Embassy spokespers­on Andrea Kalan expressed concern.

"Deeply concerned by the six-year sentence imposed on Jehovah's Witness Dennis Christense­n," she tweeted. "We agree with President Putin that persecutin­g peaceful believers is utter nonsense, and call on Russia to respect freedom of religion."

Amnesty Internatio­nal has said that it considers Christense­n and other Jehovah's Witnesses on trial as prisoners of conscience.

Christense­n's lawyer Anton Bogdanov said that he will likely file an appeal within 10 days after discussing the matter with his client.

"The man was sentenced to six years behind bars, because he, along with others of the same religious beliefs, read the Bible and spread their religious views," Bogdanov said.

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