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  • Russia - Appeal to be freed from jail due, but criminal prosecutions

    FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway
    http://www.forum18.org/

    The right to believe, to worship and witness
    The right to change one's belief or religion
    The right to join together and express one's belief

    ===============================================
    Thursday 12 January 2012
    RUSSIA: APPEAL TO BE FREED FROM JAIL DUE, BUT CRIMINAL PROSECUTIONS
    CONTINUE

    After seven months' imprisonment in Russia, Asylzhan Kelmukhambetov is
    hoping that his second appeal against an 18-month jail term - due on 19
    January at Orenburg Regional Court - will see him freed, his lawyer Raulya
    Rogacheva told Forum 18 News Service on 10 January. She said that:
    "Asylzhan has been in the prison hospital since his imprisonment suffering
    from the effects of diabetes. I saw him yesterday and he was the worst I
    have ever seen him." Although her client does not smoke, he is being held
    with others "who smoke constantly". She said that as a devout Muslim he
    only eats halal food, yet the warders bring whatever has been prepared,
    regardless of whether it meets his religious dietary requirements. The
    trial of four more Nursi readers on the same "extremism"-related charges
    resumes in a Krasnoyarsk court on 18 January. Muslim readers of Nursi's
    works frequently face prosecution under Criminal Code Article 282.2
    ("Organisation of the activity of an extremist organisation"). Elsewhere in
    Russia, other criminal cases are continuing against people for exercising
    their freedom of religion or belief. These include Jehovah's Witnesses, who
    are normally prosecuted under Criminal Code Article 282.

    RUSSIA: APPEAL TO BE FREED FROM JAIL DUE, BUT CRIMINAL PROSECUTIONS
    CONTINUE

    By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service

    After seven months' imprisonment in Russia, Asylzhan Kelmukhambetov is
    hoping that his second appeal against his 18-month prison term - due on 19
    January at Orenburg Regional Court - will see him freed from prison, his
    lawyer Raulya Rogacheva told Forum 18 News Service on 10 January. She is
    also very concerned about the state of his health. Like many Muslims who
    read the works of the late Turkish theologian Said Nursi, Kelmukhambetov
    was imprisoned on "extremism"-related charges. The trial of four more Nursi
    readers on the same charges resumes in a Krasnoyarsk court on 18 January.

    Muslim readers of Nursi's works frequently face prosecution under Criminal
    Code Article 282.2 ("Organisation of the activity of an extremist
    organisation"). The Russian authorities insist they belong to an
    organisation named Nurdzhular, which was banned as an extremist
    organisation by Russia's Supreme Court in April 2008. However, Nursi
    readers insist they belong to no organisation, but simply read his books to
    help them understand their faith better (see F18News 29 May 2008
    ).

    "We do not consider justified the ban on the books of the theologian Said
    Nursi as extremist, nor the ban on the Nurdzhular organisation, as such an
    organisation does not exist in Russia," notes the Moscow-based Sova Centre.
    The independent human rights centre has long tracked the use of
    extremism-related laws to punish religious believers and others. "In
    practice, prosecutors use the mere study of banned books by Nursi as proof
    of membership in it".

    As the number of "extremism" prosecutions continued to rise, in June 2011
    Russia's Supreme Court made clear that cases under "extremism"-related
    Articles of the Criminal Code should be very carefully and narrowly framed.
    But this has not stopped cases against Muslim readers of Nursi's works and
    Jehovah's Witnesses (see F18News 19 July 2011
    ).

    The criminal trial of a Jehovah's Witness married couple, Andrei and
    Lyutsiya Raitin, on "extremism" charges under Criminal Code Article 282
    ("Actions directed at the incitement of hatred [nenavist] or enmity
    [vrazhda], as well as the humiliation of an individual or group of persons
    on the basis of .. attitude to religion, .. conducted publicly or through
    the media") is due to resume on 23 January. Jehovah's Witnesses describe
    the accusations as "baseless", and have pointed out to Forum 18 that the
    same day the Raitins' trial began - 22 December 2011 - fellow Jehovah's
    Witness Aleksandr Kalistratov was finally acquitted on exactly the same
    charges. "Unlike Kalistratov, the Raitins held no position of
    responsibility in their local community," Jehovah's Witness spokesperson
    Grigory Martynov told Forum 18. "They're just ordinary members of the
    community".(see F18News 10 January 2012
    ).

    Article 282.2 "extremism" criminal punishments changed

    An extra possibility for punishments under Criminal Code Article 282.2 was
    added in the Law amending various Articles of the Criminal Code and other
    Laws. This was approved by the State Duma on 17 November 2011, signed by
    President Dmitry Medvedev on 7 December 2011, and added a forced labour
    possibility. At the same time, punishments under Criminal Code Article 282
    were also both increased and added to. Article 282 is the usual choice of
    prosecutors seeking to punish Jehovah's Witnesses exercising their freedom
    of religion or belief. However, Article 282.2 is the usual choice of
    prosecutors seeking to punish Muslim readers of Nursi's works exercising
    their freedom of religion or belief (see F18News 10 January 2012
    ).

    Russian "anti-extremism" legislation - including Articles 282 and 282.2 -
    has systemic problems, as noted in a commentary by Alexander Verkhovsky of
    the SOVA Center at F18News 19 July 2010
    .

    Article 282.2, Part 1 punishes: "Organisation of the activity of a social
    or religious association or other organisation in relation to which a court
    has adopted a decision legally in force on liquidation or ban on the
    activity in connection with the carrying out of extremist activity".

    Punishments under Article 282.2, Part 1 are now: "by means of a fine of
    between 100,000 Roubles [19,000 Norwegian Kroner, 2,500 Euros, or 3,170 US
    Dollars] to 300,000 Roubles [57,000 Norwegian Kroner, 7,500 Euros, or 9,510
    US Dollars],

    or of the level of pay or other income of the convicted person for a period
    of between one and two years,

    or forced labour for a period of up to three years with or without
    limitations on freedom for a period of up to two years [a new provision],

    or arrest for a period of between four and six months,

    or deprivation of freedom for a period of up to three years with of without
    deprivation of the right to carry out specific duties or to engage in a
    specific activity for a period of up to ten years and with or without
    limitations on freedom for a period of up to two years".

    Article 282.2, Part 2 punishes: "Participation in the activity of a social
    or religious association or other organisation in relation to which a court
    has adopted a decision legally in force on liquidation or ban on the
    activity in connection with the carrying out of extremist activity".

    Punishments under Article 282.2, Part 2 are now: "by means of a fine of up
    to 200,000 Roubles [38,000 Norwegian Kroner, 5,000 Euros, or 6,340 US
    Dollars],

    or of the level of pay or other income of the convicted person for a period
    of up to 18 months,

    or forced labour for a period of up to two years with or without
    limitations on freedom for a period of up to one year [a new provision],

    or arrest for a period of up to four months,

    or deprivation of freedom for a period of up to two years with of without
    deprivation of the right to carry out specific duties or to engage in a
    specific activity for a period of up to five years and with or without
    limitations on freedom for a period of up to one year".

    The forced labour penalties come into force at the beginning of 2013.

    In decisions linked to "extremism" legislation, numerous lower court
    decisions have found - on highly questionable grounds - that Russian
    translations of the Islamic theological works of Said Nursi and Jehovah's
    Witness publications are "extremist" and so placed them on the Justice
    Ministry's Federal List of Extremist Materials (see 'The battle with
    "religious extremism" - a return to past methods?' F18News 28 April 2009
    ). Once materials are
    on the Federal List, it is then illegal to distribute or store them for
    distribution.

    Such lower court decisions are of great help to officials seeking to
    prosecute Jehovah's Witnesses and Muslim readers of the works of Said Nursi
    for exercising their freedom of religion or belief. A total of 68 Jehovah's
    Witness publications, as well as 15 Russian translations of Nursi's works,
    have already been ruled "extremist" However, a recent attempt to find a key
    Hare Krishna book, the Bhagavad-Gita As It Is, "extremist" failed in court
    in Tomsk (see F18News 5 January 2012
    ).

    Orenburg second appeal

    The 42 year-old Kelmukhambetov become the first Muslim reader of Nursi's
    works in Russia to receive a criminal sentence of imprisonment, when he was
    sentenced in June 2011. After a trial in the Urals town of Orenburg lasting
    nearly a year, Magistrate Valeri Vorobyev at Judicial Unit No. 3 of the
    Lenin District sentenced Kelmukhambetov under Criminal Code Article 282.2,
    Part 1 to 18 months' imprisonment. He had not been in detention during the
    trial, so was arrested in the courtroom when the sentence was handed down.
    Once imprisoned, he was immediately sent to the prison hospital (see
    F18News 12 September 2011
    ).

    Kelmukhambetov appealed against his sentence, but Judge Svetlana Shabanova
    at Orenburg's Lenin District Court rejected his appeal in late 2011. The
    court website does not appear to list the case and on 12 January the court
    refused to give Forum 18 the date of the decision.

    He then appealed further to Orenburg Regional Court. The court website
    notes that the case arrived at the court on 10 January and lists the appeal
    hearing for the morning of 19 January. It gives no name of the judge or
    judges due to hear the appeal, and the court refused on 12 January to give
    Forum 18 any further information on the case.

    "He was the worst I have ever seen him"

    Kelmukhambetov's lawyer Rogacheva insists the case against her client is
    "unfounded" and that he has been punished merely for his religious
    activity.

    She also told Forum 18 from Orenburg that: "Asylzhan has been in the prison
    hospital since his imprisonment suffering from the effects of diabetes,"
    she complained. "I saw him yesterday and he was the worst I have ever seen
    him."

    Rogacheva also noted that Kelmukhambetov is not being treated adequately in
    Orenburg's Investigation Isolation Prison No. 1, where he was taken
    immediately after his sentencing. "He is being held there illegally. Plus
    his health is bad - he's in a very bad state, coughing and suffering from
    dizziness."

    Although her client does not smoke, he is being held with others "who smoke
    constantly". She said that as a devout Muslim he only eats halal food, yet
    the warders bring whatever has been prepared, regardless of whether it
    meets his religious dietary requirements.

    Krasnoyarsk trial resumes

    The trial under Criminal Code Article 282.2 of four more Muslim readers of
    Nursi's works resumes in a court in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk on 18
    January. The trial of Andrei Dedkov, Yevgeni Petry, Aleksey Gerasimov and
    Fizuli Askarov began under Magistrate Natalya Yermolenko at Judicial Unit
    No. 80 in the city's Soviet District with the first of several preliminary
    hearings on 31 August 2011. Dedkov and Petry are being tried under Article
    282.2, Part 1, while Gerasimov and Askarov under Article 282.2, Part 2 (see
    F18News 31 August 2011
    ).

    The Secretary at Judicial Unit No. 80 - who did not give her name -
    described the trial to Forum 18 on 12 January as a "major case" for
    Magistrate Yermolenko, the only Magistrate for her Judicial Unit. "She
    approaches the case with a sense of responsibility." However, the Secretary
    was reluctant to discuss the trial, including when and how many hearings
    have already taken place and when the trial is expected to conclude.

    Four trial hearings have already taken place, the most recent in early
    December 2011, Nursi reader Dedkov told Forum 18 on 12 January. "At one
    hearing an FSB security service officer was questioned, while at two other
    hearings secretly recorded video of a group of us meeting to drink tea and
    discuss our faith was shown," he added. "At the final hearing secretly
    intercepted telephone calls were heard." Dedkov said twelve volumes of
    evidence still needs to be examined.

    "We don't expect the trial to reach a conclusion for another three or four
    months," his co-defendant Petry complained to Forum 18 from Krasnoyarsk the
    same day. "This whole case has been going on for two years."

    Petry complained that he and his fellow defendants have had to devote so
    much time to fighting the case. "It is difficult - we can't leave town
    without the Magistrate's permission, let alone the country, and haven't
    been able to get proper work," he told Forum 18. "There's also the worry
    over the case and we have also been publicly insulted on television."

    Petry was sceptical that the Magistrate will rule in their favour. "The
    court is against us and in any case there's been an order from above to
    sentence us," he claimed. He insisted he not only wants the accusations to
    be withdrawn, he also wants those who brought the case to be fined for
    bringing accusations which he claims they know are unfounded.

    Chelyabinsk criminal investigation continues

    Meanwhile, investigators in Chelyabinsk east of the Urals are continuing to
    investigate local Muslim readers of Nursi's works under Article 282.2, Part
    2, Yuri Vlasov, Head of the Department for Especially Important Cases of
    the Chelyabinsk Region Investigation Committee, confirmed to Forum 18 from
    the city on 12 January. The case is led in Vlasov's department by Pavel
    Derkho. Vlasov refused to say if the case is against any named individuals,
    when it was likely to be completed or to give any other information.

    On 8 August 2011, a summer home in the village of Aznalino in Safakuleev
    District of Kurgan Region owned by Nursi reader Farida Ulmaskulova was
    raided. The village is about 90 minutes drive from Chelyabinsk, from where
    the raid was organised. Ulmaskulova was teaching seven girls between the
    ages of 11 and 17 the principles of Islam and reading the Koran, using a
    course devised by the Chelyabinsk Spiritual Union of Muslims. Almost
    simultaneously, two homes in Chelyabinsk - Ulmaskulova's home and the home
    of Gulnaz Valeyeva - were raided (see F18News 31 August 2011
    ).

    Ulmaskulova told Forum 18 from Chelyabinsk on 12 January 2012 that
    investigators have not told her or Valeyeva who is being investigated or
    what specific charges they might face. "We have been questioned as
    witnesses so far, not as suspects." However, she fears that she and
    Valeyeva will eventually be charged and brought to trial. She said she had
    not been questioned since September 2011, though other family members were
    summoned and questioned later in 2011. "Two of the girls I have taught were
    summoned and questioned this January," she told Forum 18.

    Ulmaskulova said the whole experience has been "unpleasant". She also
    complained that books confiscated from her - including those by Said Nursi
    - have not been returned. "I read them regularly," she noted. Nor has her
    mobile phone or computer discs taken from her been returned.

    Novosibirsk criminal investigation continues

    Two Muslim readers of Nursi's works in the Siberian city of Novosibirsk,
    Ilham Merazhov and Kamil Odilov, are being investigated under Article
    282.2. As part of the investigation, a private home where a group of their
    friends were meeting was raided in October 2011, followed by a raid on
    Merazhov's own home (see F18News 14 October 2011
    ).

    The new investigator in the case at Dzerzhinsky Inter-District
    Investigation Committee, Stanislav Leiba, told Forum 18 from Novosibirsk on
    10 January that the investigation period has just been prolonged and "no
    court hearings are expected yet". He refused to discuss any other aspect of
    the case.

    Merazhov and Odilov tried to challenge the legality of the search, claiming
    that the search warrant made no mention of what officers were looking for.
    However, their suit was rejected on 5 December 2011 by Novosibirsk Regional
    Court, Merazhov told Forum 18 from Novosibirsk on 12 January.

    The two also tried to challenge the opening of the criminal case against
    them. "The case is completely unfounded," Merazhov insisted. Although the
    challenge should have been heard within five days, it was "dragged out" for
    two months. Finally Judge Igor Temirsultanov of Novosibirsk's October
    District Court rejected the suit on 27 December 2011, Merazhov said. They
    have now appealed against this ruling to Novosibirsk Regional Court.

    Merazhov lamented that he has not been able to get back his books, computer
    and mobile phone confiscated from him during the raid. "I work at the
    university and need my computer," he told Forum 18. "The first investigator
    who has now been removed, Aleksei Los, told me I would get them back in a
    week. But at the 27 December court hearing, Leiba told me all the
    confiscated items have been sent to the FSB."

    Recent sentences

    Among other recent prosecutions of Muslim readers of Nursi's works, Rashid
    Abdulov was sentenced under Article 282.2 in the Volga city of Ulyanovsk in
    September 2011 to one-year's compulsory work, but was freed because he had
    already spent nearly eight months in custody (see F18News 12 September 2011
    ).

    Six Nursi readers were convicted under Article 282.2 at a two-hour trial in
    October 2011 in the city of Nizhny Novgorod, on the River Volga east of the
    capital Moscow. Three received prison terms, with Elshan Gasanov receiving
    one year's imprisonment (see F18News 14 October 2011
    ). (END)

    For more background, see Forum 18's Russia religious freedom survey at
    .

    Analysis of the background to Russian policy on "religious extremism" is
    available in two articles: - 'How the battle with "religious extremism"
    began' (F18News 27 April 2009
    - and - 'The battle
    with "religious extremism" - a return to past methods?' (F18News 28 April
    2009 ).

    A personal commentary by Irina Budkina, Editor of the
    Old Believer website, about continuing denial of
    equality to Russia's religious minorities, is at F18News 26 May 2005
    .

    A personal commentary by Alexander Verkhovsky, Director of the SOVA Center
    for Information and Analysis , about the
    systemic problems of Russian anti-extremism legislation, is at F18News 19
    July 2010 .

    Reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Russia can be found
    at .

    A compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
    (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments can be found at
    .

    A printer-friendly map of Russia is available at
    .
    (END)

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855
    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/

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