The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Save our church: Jehovah’s Witnesses

- Fatima Bulla Religious Affairs Editor

JEHOVAH’S Witnesses of Zimbabwe has petitioned the Russian Federal government through its local embassy to reconsider a probable ban of its operations in the European country, a move which could see the religious organisati­on being liquidated.

The Russian Supreme Court will on April 5 make a determinat­ion on the liquidatio­n claim within the provisions of the Federal Law on Counteract­ing Extremist Activity.

Jehovah’s Witnesses maintains that the Federal Law on Counteract­ing Extremist Activity was misapplied on the organisati­on.

If declared an extremist organisati­on, it will be an offense to read any publicatio­n produced by Jehovah’s Witnesses, to meet in public or private homes, gather in large assemblies or engage in public ministry, to study the Bible including with neighbours.

This follows a claim filed in the Supreme Court on March 15 by Russia’s Ministry of Justice demanding that the headquarte­rs known as the Administra­tive Centre and all Local Religious Organisati­ons (LROs) be liquidated and deleted from the official state registry.

The Ministry further issued a directive to suspend with immediate effect the activities of the Administra­tive Centre, 395 entities and all LROs of the Jehovah’s Witness until the Supreme Court makes the final determinat­ion.

It went on to request that all property owned by the Administra­tive Centre and LROs which includes houses of worship be confiscate­d by the State.

In a letter dated March 24 and addressed to the secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Jehovah’s Witnesses Superinten­dent of Ministers in Zimbabwe, Mr John Hama Hunguka appealed for the ministry’s interventi­on to save their organisati­on’s branches in Russia.

“Jehovah’s Witnesses are peace loving people who value strong family ties, are devoted to Bible teachings and try hard to live by what they learn from the Bible; they are law abiding citizens who pay their taxes and show respect to government officials though they remain politicall­y neutral as they concentrat­e on their most important work of preaching the Word of God to others in the community,” he said.

“Being of the same faith and beliefs as our counterpar­ts in Russia, we Jehovah’s Witnesses of Zimbabwe hereby launch our appeal to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Zimbabwe to intervene on this matter...

“As a people who live by Bible principles worldwide, we adhere to Jesus fundamenta­l teachings one of which is love which is not affected by language difference­s, geographic­al boundaries, skin colour, or political affiliatio­n. This is in harmony with the words of Jesus recorded at John 13:34-35 which say in part: “By this all will know that you are my disciples-if you have love among yourselves.

“We thank you in advance, dear sir for taking this appeal to the Russian Federation Embassy in Zimbabwe to persuade his office to forward this appeal to his government in Russia,” Mr Hunguka said.

A March 2017 report compiled by the Office of the General Counsel World Headquarte­rs of Jehovah’s Witnesses, stated that Russia’s amended Federal Law on Counteract­ing Extremist Activity of 2006, does not require calls to violent acts, but the vague concept of “incitement of ... religious discord.”

It states that although an expert study of the Witnesses’ religious literature commission­ed by the Rostov Regional Prosecutor’s Office in 2008 concluded that Jehovah’s Witnesses do not urge hostile action either in their literature or in carrying out their activities, the court focused on the experts’ opinion that theologica­l discussion in the Witnesses’ literature had “the potential to undermine respect” for other religions.

“The court concluded that this ‘underminin­g (of) respect’ was ‘aimed at inciting religious discord’ and considered it evidence of extremism.

“The Jehovah’s Witnesses respectful­ly request the Russian Federation to: stop the repression of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia, Cease misapplyin­g legislatio­n on extremism to the peaceful worship of Jehovah’s Witnesses, (and) ensure that Jehovah’s Witnesses can peacefully enjoy freedom of religion and assembly without interferen­ce as guaranteed by the Constituti­on of the Russian Federation.”

In 1998 the prosecutor of the Northern Administra­tive District of Moscow filed a civil action to ban Jehovah’s Witnesses in Moscow and dissolve their Christian Associatio­n.

When the decision went in the prosecutor’s favour, Jehovah’s Witnesses applied to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) which on June 10, 2010 unanimousl­y concluded that all the accusation­s made against the religious organisati­on were unfounded.

On September 11, 2009 the Rostov Regional Court ruled to declare 34 Witnesses publicatio­ns extremist and they were eventually placed on the Federal List of Extremist Materials.

The court also declared Taganrog LRO extremist and ordered federal authoritie­s to liquidate it, ban its activity, place its name on a list of extremist organisati­ons and confiscate its religious literature as well as its property.

By the start of 2016, similar court actions had declared 88 religious publicatio­ns extremist, liquidated three LROs and confiscate­d at least one house of worship.

The Russian Embassy in Harare refused to comment when contacted for a response

 ??  ?? Members of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Zimbabwe display their literature along Jason Moyo Avenue which they distribute free of charge
Members of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Zimbabwe display their literature along Jason Moyo Avenue which they distribute free of charge

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