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From Keston News Service: AZERBAIJAN: BAPTIST
CHURCH THREATENED WITH DEMOLITION by Felix Corley, Keston News
Service An Interior Ministry colonel has threatened an unregistered
Baptist church in the north east of the capital Baku with demolition if
the church refuses to register with the authorities, Keston News Service
has learned. "If you don't register we'll close the church and knock it
down," Pastor Ivan Orlov, leader of the Baku church, quoted Colonel
Aliev as having told the Baptists verbally when he came to the church
last month. Colonel Aliev of the national Interior Ministry – who did
not specify which department of the Ministry he was from – also
threatened to have church members sacked from their work. Keston
contacted the State Committee for Work with Religious Organisations in
Baku on 8 November to ask why the church was being threatened with
demolition and why the congregation was being pressured to register when
Azerbaijani law does not require religious groups to register in order
to be allowed to function. However, an official said only Namik
Allahverdiev, deputy to committee chairman Rafik Aliev, could speak on
the subject. However, Allahverdiev's telephone went unanswered.The
Baptists report that Colonel Aliev's threat followed strong pressure to
register. "He said that the law required registration and claimed that
112 churches have already been registered," the Sumgait-based Baptist
pastor Pavel Byakov told Keston on 8 November. "Our people told him
firmly that we are not going to register any of our congregations. "The
Baku church belongs to the International Council of Churches of
Evangelical Christians/Baptists, which rejects registration in all the
former Soviet republics where it operates, believing this leads to
unacceptable government interference. (Azerbaijan has Baptist Union
congregations as well, some of which have managed to register with the
State Committee.) Pastor Byakov was not too concerned by the demolition
threat. "It was more in the nature of intimidation," he told Keston.
"We're used to such threats." He said that "of course" the church still
meets for worship and is determined to continue doing so. "There is no
day when it doesn't meet."Colonel Aliev's visit to the church followed
an earlier call at home to Pastor Orlov and came as pressure mounted on
the Baku congregation in October.On two separate occasions earlier in
the month, an officer from the local police station had arrived at the
church during a service warning the church to register and warning that
it would be prevented from meeting unless it registered. A statement
from the church on 6 November, received by Keston, expressed concern
about this pressure and the demolition threat and called on fellow
believers to support the congregation in prayer and in appeals to the
authorities. Branislav Solovic,human rights officer at the Baku office
of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe(OSCE)told
Keston on 8 November that he was not aware of the threats to the Baptist
church, but pointed out that neither international human rights
standards nor OSCE commitments limit the right to freedom of religion
only to officially registered communities. To learn more about
persecution in Azerbaijan, contact VOM Reader Services here:contact
vom and ask for a copy of the October 2002 VOM Newsletter. |