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Armenia Opens Door To Jehovah's Witnesses

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  • Armenia Opens Door To Jehovah's Witnesses

    ARMENIA OPENS DOOR TO JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES

    Institute for War and peace reporting (IWPR)
    29 Oct. 2004

    Official sanctioning of a group seen as alien to Armenian religious
    tradition gets stormy public reception.

    By Zhanna Alexanian in Yerevan

    The long-delayed registration of the Jehovah's Witnesses as a legal
    religious organisation has fulfilled one of Armenia's international
    obligations, but has met bitter hostility from many individuals and
    church leaders.

    After nine years and 14 applications, the western church finally
    received legal status on October 12, in a country where the
    three-million-strong population belongs overwhelmingly to the Armenian
    Apostolic Church.

    By approving the move, the government met one of the civil rights
    requirements of the Council of Europe, CoE, which Armenia joined
    in 2001. Just a day before the October 8 registration, the CoE
    parliamentary assembly passed a resolution calling for speedier
    progress on the matter.

    Jehovah's Witnesses - who say they have long faced persecution from
    the Armenian authorities, especially the military - welcomed the move.
    Hratch Keshishian, the leader of the group within Armenia, said the
    government had taken a "courageous step".

    Government officials said the Jehovah's Witnesses had won the right
    to registration. "After studying the documents that were submitted,
    we saw that the [previous] grounds for denying registration had been
    eliminated," said Tigran Mukuchian, the deputy justice minister. "This
    time they are in full conformity with the law, and the state body
    responsible for registration simply fulfilled its duties."

    However, many people, particularly those connected with the Apostolic
    Church, remain opposed to the presence of the Jehovah's Witnesses,
    saying that Armenian society and even national security are at risk.

    Claiming six million adherents around the world, the Jehovah's
    Witnesses say they have 8,000 baptised members among a total of about
    20,000 followers in Armenia. Keshishian said he doubted registration
    would lead to any rise in these numbers.

    But in a society historically centred around a single faith, the
    level of suspicion about proselytising newcomers is high, and the
    hostility is expressed in often virulent terms.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses have run into trouble both from the established
    church, which opposes what it sees as attempts by Christian groups from
    the West to recruit among its flock; and from the military, which until
    this year was inflexible on the issue of conscription. As pacifists,
    Jehovah's Witnesses are opposed to serving in any country's army.

    The Armenian church leader, Catholicos Karekin the Second, called
    the Jehovah's Witnesses a "totalitarian sect", while Vahram Melikian,
    spokesman for the Holy See at Echmiadzin, the seat of the Apostolic
    Church, said they were "anti-Christian".

    Melikian attacked the current law on freedom of conscience and
    religious organisations, saying it would "bring disaster" because it
    failed to make religious groups sufficiently accountable.

    The animosity expressed by senior clerics was echoed by writer Perch
    Zeytuntsyan, who said, "Poverty, hopelessness - all the conditions
    exist for people to become sect members. However, they should realise
    that no intelligent person will turn to a sect. The members are
    ignorant people, traitors to the nation."

    Galust Sahakian, leader of the ruling Republican Party, opposed the
    decision to register the Jehovah's Witnesses, saying that adhering to
    European standards should not "atomise our national values", he said.

    The Republican Party's youth wing, Baze, has opened a hotline for
    anyone wishing to report alleged illegal activities by Jehovah's
    Witnesses.

    The government insists that Armenia has nothing to fear from the group.

    "We should not follow the path of banning [them], but should try to
    give them a chance. After that we should set conditions, follow them
    up, and if they violate the law, we should be able to stop their
    activities within the framework of the legislation," said Prime
    Minister Andranik Margarian.

    He note that some three dozen other minority religious groups have
    been granted permits, including some that are perceived as more
    controversial than the Jehovah's Witnesses.

    Mukuchian said it bringing the Jehovah's Witnesses within the legal
    framework would make it easier to prosecute if there were any breaches
    of the law banning proselytism.

    The head of the government department for national minorities and
    religion, Hranush Kharatian, told IWPR she did not understand the
    fuss. Instead of calling for a clampdown on the Jehovah's Witnesses,
    parliament should "create a legislative basis for introducing
    democratic values in our country.

    "The point is, they were functioning in the country irrespective of
    whether they were officially recognised by the government or not."

    Kharatian denied that pressure from the CoE was the reason why
    registration was granted.

    "The Council of Europe only makes suggestions. We only have to
    say that we are rejecting something for a good reason. But we are
    not doing that," said Kharatian. "If there is proof that Jehovah's
    Witnesses are damaging our national or public or social security,
    no international organisation can oblige us to register them."

    Mikael Danielian, chairman of the Helsinki Association of Armenia
    and one of the country's most prominent human rights activists, said
    that registration would not mean an end to difficulties faced by the
    Jehovah's Witnesses.

    The group's opposition to compulsory military service is a particular
    flashpoint, he said.

    "At the very moment of registration, there are members of the
    organisation in prisons," he said. "I believe there will be pressure
    upon them."

    Alternative military service was introduced in Armenia in July 2004,
    allowing those who refuse to carry arms on religious grounds to apply
    to the army authorities for some other form of duty.

    Since 1995, about 200 Jehovah's Witnesses have been detained by the
    authorities as conscientious objectors. Keshishian said 11 people
    had been given prison sentences, but he hoped that those still in
    jail would now be freed.

    "The young men declared in the courtroom that they were ready to do an
    alternative form of working service, but would not go into the army,"
    said Keshishian.

    Arthur Martirosian, a spokesman for the Jehovah's Witnesses, denied
    that the group forced its members to make the choice, "To go to the
    army or refuse to do so, to accept alternative service or not, is a
    personal decision for every young man. These matters have nothing to
    do with the organisation."

    Zhanna Alexanian is a reporter with the Armenianow.com weekly.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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