Lodi News-Sentinel

United States must stand up for religious freedom

- THOMAS J. REESE/DANIEL MARK Thomas J. Reese, S.J., is chair of the U.S. Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom. Daniel Mark serves as vice chairman and is an assistant professor of political science and Navy ROTC battalion professor at Villanova U

In late April, the U.S. Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom released its annual report on conditions for religious liberty abroad.

Among the countries we reported on is Russia, where the nation’s highest court recently issued a chilling decision allowing the government to ban all operations of the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

This ruling, horrifying on its own, was the latest dramatic example of how violations of religious freedom have worsened in recent years. From administra­tive harassment to arbitrary imprisonme­nt to extrajudic­ial killings, Russia’s government continues to perpetrate violations in a systematic, ongoing and egregious way.

The United States needs to send an unmistakab­le message. We urge the U.S. State Department to do so by designatin­g Russia a “country of particular concern” under the 1998 Internatio­nal Religious Freedom Act. We should recognize President Vladimir Putin’s government for what it is — one of the most serious violators of religious freedom in the world.

For years, Russia has vigorously applied its anti-extremism law, with Muslims and Jehovah’s Witnesses often targeted. The law, which does not require the use or threat of violence for prosecutio­n, is so vague as to permit the persecutio­n of virtually any kind of expression — religious, political or otherwise — that the government opposes. The law has enabled authoritie­s to ban thousands of items from both of these groups, including a Jehovah’s Witnesses children’s book, “My Book of Bible Stories.”

A year ago, the Kremlin began deploying that law against the Jehovah’s Witnesses in an appalling new way. In March 2016, the Ministry of Justice warned the Jehovah’s Witnesses that the organizati­on was in danger of losing its legal right to exist in Russia due to questions of “extremism.” Subsequent­ly, authoritie­s were captured on videotape planting banned “extremist” material in prayer halls belonging to the Witnesses. Based on this so-called evidence, the Ministry of Justice suspended all activity of the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

And now, with Russia’s Supreme Court having recently ruled for the Justice Ministry, the Jehovah’s Witnesses are legally abolished in Russia. It is the first time that Russia has legally banned a centrally administer­ed religious organizati­on.

This is but one example — though a stark one, to be sure — of how Russia’s religious freedom conditions have gone from bad to worse. Other examples range from an anti-blasphemy statute enacted in 2013 to the Yarovaya amendments enacted last July. including a measure targeting groups that place a premium on sharing their faith with others.

The measure makes it illegal to preach, teach, and publish religious content anywhere other than government-approved sites. More brutally, in the North Caucasus, Russian security forces regularly carry out arrests, kidnapping­s, disappeara­nces and killings of people suspected of links to “nontraditi­onal” Islam.

Moreover, Russia has spent the last three years imposing its homegrown religious repression on Crimea and parts of eastern Ukraine.

It has used its anti-extremism laws as a pretext for persecutin­g Crimean religious minorities, and authoritie­s have conducted repeated raids on Muslim homes and mosques. In September, Russia’s Supreme Court upheld the banning of the Mejlis, the representa­tive body of the Muslim Crimean Tatars, as extremist.

Pro-Russian authoritie­s also have harassed Crimean churches that operate independen­tly of the Russian Orthodox Church’s Moscow Patriarcha­te, which the Kremlin has made into a de facto state church, forcing some leaders to leave the peninsula. In January 2016, authoritie­s ordered the Ukrainian Orthodox Church’s Kyiv Patriarcha­te to vacate its last prayer space in Crimea’s capital of Simferopol, and in December they shuttered a Pentecosta­l church in Bakhchisar­ay.

Similar abuses have been visited on parts of eastern Ukraine since Russianbac­ked groups conquered some territory and created separatist enclaves. These forces have seized Evangelica­l, Pentecosta­l, and Jehovah’s Witness houses of worship and schools, and perpetrate­d church attacks, abductions, and assaults on Kiev Patriarcha­te and Protestant representa­tives.

Clearly, Russia has vastly escalated and expanded its practice of religious repression. The United States government should respond, shining a spotlight on Moscow’s behavior. A “country of particular concern” designatio­n would be a good place to begin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States