Russia
International
Religious Freedom Report
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
26 October 2001
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government
generally respects this right in practice. Although the Constitution also
provides for the equality of all religions before the law and for the separation
of church and state, in practice the Government does not always respect
the provision for equality of religions.
There was no change in the status of respect for religious freedom
during the period covered by this report. Local authorities continued to
restrict the rights of some religious minorities in some regions. Despite
court decisions which liberalized its interpretation, the complex 1997
"Law on Religion," which replaced a more generous 1990 law, seriously disadvantages
religious groups that are new to the country by making it difficult for
them to register as religious organizations, and thus obtain the status
of juridical person, which includes the right to establish bank accounts,
own property, issue invitations to foreign guests, publish literature,
and conduct worship services in prisons and state-owned hospitals. However,
individuals affiliated with unregistered faiths are entitled to rent facilities
where religious services can be held.
The Ministry of Justice reported that as of January 31, 2001, more
than 20,215 organizations had sought registration or reregistration, and
2095 of these faced the possibility of "liquidation," i.e. deprivation
of juridical status. These included large numbers of Muslim congregations,
as well as local congregations of Jehovah's Witnesses, the Salvation Army,
the Church of Scientology, Seventh-Day Adventists, Pentecostals, and the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons), most of which had
officially registered national organizations. There were reports that by
May 2001 around 100 organizations had been liquidated. The Ministry of
Justice stated that most of these were defunct, but religious minority
denominations and nongovernmental organizations (NGO's) noted that a number
were active and had attempted to reregister. Some of these cases involving
active groups were being contested in court as of the end of the period
covered by this report.
Contradictions between federal and local law in some regions, and varying
interpretations of the law, provide regional officials with pretexts to
restrict the activities of religious minorities. Discriminatory practices
at the local level are also attributable to the relatively greater susceptibility
of local governments to lobbying by majority religions, as well as to discriminatory
attitudes that are held widely in society. President Vladimir Putin's articulated
desire for greater centralization of power and strengthened rule of law
led to some improvements in the area of religious freedom in the regions.
Over the last 2 years there have been indications of a growing convergence
between the Russian Orthodox Church and the State. The Church has entered
into a number of agreements, some formal, others informal, with government
ministries on such matters as guidelines for public education, religious
training for government employees and military personnel, and, in certain
cases, law enforcement and customs decisions, that appear to give it a
preferred position. There is evidence that the Procurator General has encouraged
local prosecutors to challenge the registration and reregistration of some
non-traditional religious groups. In a number of such cases, local courts
have upheld the right of non-traditional groups to register or reregister.
The authorities forcibly hospitalized a Unification Church member in
a psychiatric ward for 9 days while they attempted to gather evidence against
the group. There were isolated instances in which local officials detained
individuals engaged in public discussion of their religious views.
While religious matters are not a source of societal hostility for
most citizens, relations between different religious organizations are
frequently tense, particularly at the leadership level, and there continue
to be instances of religiously motivated violence. Popular attitudes toward
Muslims are negative in many regions, and there are manifestations of anti-Semitism
as well as societal hostility toward newer, non-Orthodox, religions.
The U.S. Government has continued to engage the Government, a number
of religious denominations and groups, NGO's, and others in a steady dialog
on religious freedom.
Section I. Religious Demography
The country has a total area of about 6.5 million square miles and
its population is approximately 147.5 million.
There are no reliable statistics that break down the country's population
by denomination. Available information suggests that slightly more than
half of all inhabitants consider themselves Russian Orthodox Christians,
although the vast majority are not regular churchgoers. In an opinion poll
conducted in February 2000 and published in the newspaper Argumenty i Fakty
on April 26, 2000, 54 percent of the respondents (of an unknown total number)
stated that they were Russian Orthodox, 3 percent Muslims, 0.4 percent
Catholic, 0.3 percent Jewish, 1 percent "other religions," and 39 percent
atheist or agnostic. However, these statistics do not reflect the considerable
growth in the numbers of Protestant believers, many of whose congregations
are unregistered. By some estimates, Protestants constitute the third largest
group of believers after Orthodox Christians and Muslims. An estimated
600,000 to one million Jews remain in Russia (0.5 percent of the total
population) following large-scale emigration over the last two decades.
The vast majority of Jews, about 80 percent, live in Moscow or St. Petersburg.
The Ministry of Justice reports that as of the end of January 2001,
approximately 18,130 organizations were registered or reregistered, compared
with approximately 16,000 in 1987. The number of groups reregistered at
that time of the Ministry of Justice report was as follows: Russian Orthodox
Church 7,910 groups, Autonomous Russian Orthodox Church 37, Russian Orthodox
Church Abroad 20, Ukrainian Orthodox Church 8, Old Believer 171, Roman
Catholic 205, Armenian Apostolic 29, Muslim 2,610, Buddhist 110, Jewish
100, Baptist 672, Pentecostal 518, Seventh-Day Adventist 305, Lutheran
167, Apostolic 61, Methodist 53, Presbyterian 107, Anglican 1, Jehovah's
Witnesses 203, Salvation Army 4, Mormons 14, Krishna 71, Baha'i 16, Unification
Church 2. In addition, 4,739 organizations, which may include both new
affiliates of the denominations listed above or new organizations, registered
for the first time.
The number of registered religious organizations does not reflect the
entire demography of religious believers. For example, as a result of a
number of problems related to both intraconfessional disputes and poor
administrative procedures on the part of local authorities, an estimated
500 to several thousand Muslim organizations remain unregistered. The registration
figures probably also underestimate the number of Pentecostal believers.
New Pentecostal organizations are being formed rapidly, and unofficial
estimates suggest that there are between 1,500 and 2,000 Pentecostal congregations
nationwide, many of which are unregistered. In addition to those listed,
the Unification Church has at least 28 other organizations that it is unable
to register.
Section II. Status of Religious Freedom
Legal/Policy Framework
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government
generally respects this right in practice; however, although the Constitution
also provides for the equality of all religions before the law and the
separation of church and state, in practice the Government does not always
respect the provision for equality of religions.
In 1990, the Soviet Government adopted a law on religious freedom designed
to make all religions equal before the law. (After the breakup of the Soviet
Union, this law became part of the Russian Federation's legal code.) The
1990 law forbade government interference in religion and established simple
registration procedures for religious groups. Registration of religious
groups was not required, but groups could obtain a number of advantages
by registering, such as the ability to establish official places of worship
or benefit from tax exemptions. The 1990 Religion Law helped facilitate
a revival of religious activity.
In October 1997, the Duma enacted and then-President Boris Yeltsin
signed, a new, restrictive, and potentially discriminatory law on religion.
The 1997 Religion Law ostensibly targeted so-called "totalitarian sects"
or dangerous religious "cults." However, the intent of some of the law's
sponsors appears to have been to discriminate against members of foreign
and less well-established religions by making it difficult for them to
manifest their beliefs through organized religious institutions.
The 1997 Law on Religion is very complex, with many ambiguous and contradictory
provisions. It creates various categories of religious communities with
differing levels of legal status and privileges. The law distinguishes
between religious "groups" and "organizations," and creates two categories
of organizations: "regional" and "centralized." A religious "group" is
a congregation of worshipers that is not registered and consequently does
not have the legal status of a juridical person--it may not open a bank
account, own property, issue invitations to foreign guests, publish literature,
or conduct worship services in prisons and state-owned hospitals. A "group"
does not enjoy tax benefits and other rights extended to religious organizations,
such as the right of its members to proselytize. The law does not purport
to abridge the rights of individual members of groups in other respects.
For example, a member of a religious group can buy property for the group's
use, invite personal guests to engage in religious instruction, and import
religious material. Groups are permitted to rent public spaces and hold
services. Nonetheless, in practice, groups that are not registered encounter
formidable difficulty in achieving these rights.
The 1997 law provided that local congregations that had existed for
15 years were eligible for registration as local "organizations." A "centralized
religious organization" can be founded by a confession that has 3 functioning
local "organizations" (each of which must have at least 10 members who
are citizens) in different regions. A centralized organization has the
right to establish affiliated local organizations without adhering to the
15-year rule. In implementing this provision, the Government has extended
this definition to include a "registered centralized managing center."
Among the law's most controversial provisions are those that limit the
rights, activities, and status of religious "groups" existing in the country
for less than 15 years and require that religious groups exist for 15 years
before they can qualify for "organization" status.
Implementation of the 1997 law has been a source of concern for many
religious minorities, especially those based outside the country. Groups
that did not manage to register under the old law or groups that are new
to the country are severely hindered in their ability to practice their
faith. However, for those that were registered before the passage of the
1997 law, the situation is somewhat better. The Constitutional Court's
November 1999 ruling effectively "grandfathered in" a number of religious
organizations that were registered at the time the 1997 law was passed
but could not prove 15 years of operation in Russia.
In practice the registration process, which involves simultaneous registration
at both the federal and local levels, has proven to be onerous for a number
of confessions, because it requires considerable time, effort, and legal
expense. International and well-funded domestic religious organizations,
in particular, began the reregistration process soon after publication
of the regulations governing reregistration. However, other religious groups
faced significant problems in registration and reregistration, and local
officials refused to register some groups.
Officials of the Presidential Administration, the regions, and localities
have established consultative mechanisms to facilitate government interaction
with religious communities and to monitor application of the Law on Religion.
Groups interact with a special governmental interministerial commission
on religion, which includes representatives from law enforcement bodies,
on matters involving implementation of the laws and similar questions.
On broader policy questions, religious groups interact with a special department
within the Presidential Administration's Directorate for Domestic Policy.
Nevertheless, as a result of the lack of specific guidance on how to apply
the 1997 law correctly and the shortage of knowledgeable local officials,
registering before the December 31, 2000, deadline was a significant obstacle
for a number of religious bodies, which are either subject to liquidation
or have been liquidated.
According to Ministry of Justice figures published in May 2001, approximately
18,130 organizations were reregistered or registered anew, while 2,095
(10 percent of 20,215) organizations are subject to liquidation (elimination
of legal status as a juridical person). This represents an increase of
over 1200 organizations officially registered since the 1997 religion law
went into effect. Ministry of Justice officials estimate that as of May
2001, nearly 100 organizations have been liquidated through court proceedings.
The majority of such organizations may exist on paper only. However, some
of them appear to have been liquidated after repeated attempts to register
with the local branch of the Ministry of Justice failed.
Religious groups also can work through a Presidential Council on Cooperation
with Religious Organizations, composed of members of the Presidential Administration,
secular academics who are specialists on religious affairs, and representatives
of religious denominations making up the majority of believers in the country.
In March 2000, the Government announced that the Council had been reorganized,
reduced in size, and its membership changed. All government officials who
previously held positions on the Council, other than those representing
the Presidential Administration, lost their seats. Religious denominations
also lost several seats, and in some cases groups that had previously had
several representatives were reduced to only one. This reorganization was
criticized by some groups. For example, longtime Council member Rabbi Adolf
Shayevich of the Moscow Choral Synagogue lost his seat to his rival Rabbi
Berel Lazar of the Moscow Lubavitch community, who has tended not to criticize
the Russian Government under Putin; this led to allegations of government
favoritism and politically motivated interference in the affairs of the
Jewish community. Other groups such as Pentecostals, which have several
large umbrella organizations, were allowed only one representative as well.
Some NGO's have alleged that the prominent role of members of the Presidential
Administration in the Council's activities gives the Council a greater
influence with the Ministry of Justice on registering some religious groups
than those implied in its mandated advisory role.
Religious groups also can interact with the authorities through the
offices of the new Plenipotentiary Presidential District Representatives
(PolPreds) of the seven newly formed districts of the Russian Federation.
In the administrative structures of at least some of the Polpreds, offices
have been designated to deal with social and religious issues. There is
also a department of religious affairs in each regional administration
and in many municipal administrations. However, it is at the regional and
municipal level that religious minorities often encounter the greatest
problems.
The office of Russian Federation Human Rights Ombudsman Oleg Mironov
set up a department dedicated to religious freedom issues. This department
receives numerous complaints from individuals and groups about infringement
of religious freedom. Mironov has criticized the 1997 Religion Law publicly
on many occasions and recommended changes to bring it into accordance with
international standards and with the Constitution. He also lobbied President
Putin unsuccessfully to extend the deadline for reregistration. Nevertheless,
some argue that these efforts come too late for organizations facing liquidation,
since the deadline for reregistration expired December 31, 2000.
Restrictions on Religious Freedom
Among the Law on Religion's most controversial provisions are those
that limit the rights, activities, and status of religious "groups" existing
in the country for less than 15 years and require that religious groups
exist for 15 years before they can qualify for "organization" status. These
articles may violate the Constitution's provision of equality before the
law of all religious confessions.
The cases of a Khakasiya Pentecostal church and the Yaroslavl Jehovah's
Witnesses formed the basis of a constitutional challenge to the Law on
Religion filed with the Constitutional Court in May 1998 by the Institute
for Religion and Law, an NGO. The petitioners claimed that the provision
of the law requiring religious organizations to prove 15 years of existence
in the country in order to register is unconstitutional. In a November
1999 hearing, the Constitutional Court upheld the 15-year provision, but
also ruled that religious organizations registered before the passage of
the 1997 law need not meet the 15-year requirement in order to registered.
However, this ruling does not enable independent churches with less
than 15 years in the country to register as religious organizations unless
they were registered before the passage of the law or affiliate themselves
with existing centralized organizations. The Institute for Religion and
Law and other NGO's note that this is a significant restriction for small
independent religious communities and foreign-based "new religions," such
as the Church of Scientology. Also, some domestic human rights activists
are concerned by language in the ruling that cites 1993 and 1996 decisions
in the European Court of Human Rights regarding religious sects, and upholds
the right of the Government to place certain limits on the activity of
religious groups in the interests of national security. The Security Council
adopted a National Security Concept in the spring of 2000 that includes
a specific warning on the allegedly negative impact of foreign missionary
activity.
Despite the Federal Government's efforts to implement the 1997 Religion
Law liberally and to provide assurances that religious freedom would be
observed, restrictions continue at the local level. The vagueness of the
law and regulations, the contradictions between federal and local law,
and varying interpretations provide regional officials with a pretext for
restricting the activities of religious minorities. Discriminatory practices
at the local level are partly attributable to the decentralization of power
that occurred during the Yeltsin era. They are also due to the relatively
greater susceptibility of local governments to lobbying by majority religions
and discriminatory attitudes that are held widely in society. However,
under the Putin Administration, the Government has attempted to rectify
this situation to some degree by introducing measures to strengthen the
center in its relations with the regions. As part of this effort, President
Putin divided the country into seven districts overseen by the Polpreds
and introduced a federal register to ensure that local legislation conforms
to the Federation's Constitution and federal laws.
Since 1994, 33 of the country's 89 regional governments have passed
laws and decrees intended to restrict the activities of religious groups.
In May 2001, the Ministry of Justice reported that these 33 regions passed
50 regional laws and other legislative bills relating to freedom of religion.
The Ministry determined that 35 of these were unconstitutional or not in
conformity with federal legislation. The Federal Government was not able
to challenge effectively the unconstitutionality of these restrictions
before the advent of the Putin administration, although under President
Yeltsin it sent warnings to 30 regions regarding the unconstitutionality
of local laws concerning religion. In 2000 and the first half of 2001,
regional administrations have been required to register local laws, a procedure
that ensures that they are in accordance with federal legislation. This
process of centralization and coordination of authority was continuing
as of the end of the period covered by this report. As of the end of May
2001, 6 of the 35 laws were rescinded, and 8 were brought into conformance
with federal law. The Federal Government is able to work through the Procurator,
Minister of Justice, Presidential Administration, and the courts to force
regions to comply with federal law. The Government also has become more
active in preventing or reversing discriminatory actions taken at the local
level by more actively disseminating information to the regions and, when
necessary, reprimanding the officials at fault. For example, the Presidential
Academy of State Service has actively worked with religious freedom advocates
such as the Slavic Center for Law and Justice to train regional and municipal
officials in properly implementing the law.
Implementation of the 1997 law has been a source of concern by many
religious minorities, especially those based outside the country. Groups
that did not manage to register under the old law or groups that are new
to the country are severely hindered in their ability to practice their
faith. However, for those that were registered before passage of the 1997
law, the situation is somewhat better. The Constitutional Court's November
1999 ruling effectively "grandfathered in" a number of religious organizations
that were registered at the time the 1997 law was passed but could not
prove 15 years of operation in Russia. For example, in the case of Jehovah's
Witnesses, the 15 year rule no longer prevented the registration of newly
created local Jehovah's Witnesses religious organizations, nor reregistration
of organizations which were registered at the time of implementation of
the 1997 law, but which were less than 15 years old.
In practice the registration process, which involves simultaneous registration
at both the federal and local levels, has proven onerous for a number of
confessions; it requires considerable time, effort, and legal expense.
International and well-funded domestic religious organizations, in particular,
began the reregistration process soon after publication of the regulations
governing reregistration. Russian Pentecostal groups, which have a solid
and growing network of churches throughout the country, sought guidance
from the Ministry of Justice on reregistration as early as November 1997.
However, a large number of Pentecostal parishes (by some estimates up to
500) remain unregistered. This is partially because some congregations
refuse to register out of philosophical convictions. In many other cases,
local officials, sometimes prejudiced by close relations with local Russian
Orthodox officials, have refused to register Pentecostal and other non-Orthodox
organizations.
According to NGO and media reports and government officials, registration
of Muslim religious organizations proceeded slowly, leaving many local
religious organizations unable to reregister before the December 31, 2000,
deadline. The process was complicated by irregularities in registration
in some Muslim regions like Bashkortostan and Dagestan, which required
federal intervention. An intraconfessional conflict between rival Muslim
groups exacerbated the situation. A struggle between the Spiritual Directorate
of Muslims in European Russia and Siberia, based in Ufa and led by Mufti
Talgat Tadzhuddin, and the Moscow-based Russian Council of Muftis, led
by Chief Mufti Ravil Gainutdin, appears to have hindered reregistration
efforts by Muslim organizations. According to the Ministry of Justice,
only 2,610 Muslim organizations had reregistered by May 2001, a decrease
of nearly 400 registered organizations compared to 1997. The mutual accusations
of "Wahhabism" by the two groups have complicated matters, since this pejorative
label (as used in Russia) may have had a detrimental affect on reregistration
in certain regions and has made local ethnic Russians more wary of Muslim
religious organizations. (The word "Wahhabi" refers to a Sunni branch of
Islam that has become a pejorative term in Russia because of persistent
allegations that "Wahhabi extremism" is to blame for terrorist attacks
linked to the war in Chechnya.) Recognizing the scope of the problem, federal
officials have directed that local branches of the Ministry of Justice
refrain from liquidating Muslim organizations until the problem can be
resolved. The implication is that those organizations that did not manage
to reregister are expected to be able to do so even though the deadline
passed several months ago. However, according to an April 11, 2000, report
by Keston News Service, Kabardino-Balkariya authorities have liquidated
37 Muslim organizations that failed to submit documents for reregistration.
Keston News Service also reported in April that the Kabardino-Balkaria
regional parliament had passed a law banning extremist religious activities
that was aimed primarily at "Wahhabism." A similar ban exists in Dagestan.
On November 24, 2000, Keston news service reported that the Federal
Security Service (FSB) provided information to local newspapers in Kostroma
to discredit the pastor of a local Pentecostal Church involved in litigation
over its impending liquidation. Despite the fact that the articles appeared
before the court process began, the Church won its court case.
The Church of Scientology has experienced many problems with both registration
and harassment from the authorities.
It was registered as a religious organization only in Moscow in 1994.
Despite repeated attempts to reregister this organization in Moscow, the
Moscow office of the Ministry of Justice reconsidered reregistering the
organization only after many refusals and a December 2000 court ruling.
However, the Ministry, having consulted with the Procurator, decided to
challenge the court's decision. As a result, the Church is still not reregistered
and faces liquidation.
In its preamble (which government officials insist has no legal standing),
the 1997 Religion Law recognizes the "special contribution of Orthodoxy
to the history of Russia and to the establishment and development of Russia's
spirituality and culture." It accords "respect" to Christianity, Islam,
Buddhism, Judaism, and certain other religions as an inseparable part of
the country's historical heritage. Many citizens firmly believe that at
least nominal adherence to the Russian Orthodox Church is at the heart
of what it means to be Russian. This belief appears to have manifested
itself in a church-state relationship that is detrimental to non-Orthodox
denominations.
Under the 1997 Religion Law, representative offices of foreign religious
organizations are required to register with state authorities. They are
barred from conducting liturgical services and other religious activity
unless they have acquired the status of a group or organization. Although
the law officially requires all foreign religious organizations to register,
in practice foreign religious representatives' offices (those not registered
under law) have opened without registering or have been accredited to a
registered religious organization. However, those offices cannot carry
out religious activities and do not have the status of a religious "organization."
The Russian Orthodox Church has made special arrangements with government
agencies to conduct religious education and to provide spiritual counseling.
Although other denominations, such as Protestant groups, have been granted
access to military personnel, it is on a much more limited basis than that
accorded to the Russian Orthodox Church. The Church has signed agreements
with the Ministries of Education, Defense, Health, Interior, and the Tax
Ministry over the last year. The details of these agreements are far from
transparent, but from the information available the Church appears to be
accorded preferential treatment over other denominations by these ministries.
Deputy Minister of Education Chepurnykh sent out a letter July 12,
2000, to all institutions of higher education warning of the threat from
certain Western religious groups termed "extremist and destructive" and
accusing the West of trying to undermine citizens by introducing "Western
values" into education. Among the "cults" mentioned in the letter are Jehovah's
Witnesses, the Unification Church, the Church of Scientology, and the Mormons.
The arguments in the letter echo statements made by Church officials including
Patriarch Aleksiy II, who was reported on a December 20, 2000, television
program as saying that the Russian Orthodox Church was concerned by the
flood of various "cults" into Russia and by "pseudomissionaries." The Patriarch
declared that, "certain forces want Satanists and other cults on our land,
who employ psychotropic methods of hypnosis and steal the souls of our
fellow countrymen." When the contents of the Ministry of Education letter
became public, numerous minority denominations and NGO's protested. The
Keston Institute on November 17, 2000 reported that its correspondent received
mixed responses from Ministry of Education officials. One official reportedly
said that the Deputy Minister's letter contained "incorrect formulations,"
while another official vigorously defended it and claimed that foreign
"cults" were behind a wave of ritual killings in schools and that "something
had to be done about it."
During a December 26, 2000, press conference, Lev Levinson, a Moscow
Atheist Society representative and legislative aide to Duma deputy Sergey
Kovalev, complained that the principle of secular education, guaranteed
in the Constitution, has eroded. Levinson complained that in Belgorod school
children take Bible study as a compulsory subject. Levinson said that even
more troubling to him was that bureaucrats improperly transfer funds to
the Orthodox Church. He cited as an example the cases of Moscow municipal
authorities in Novo Kosinskaya and Ivanovskaya districts who reportedly
contributed about $1,379 (40,000 rubles) toward construction of the Cathedral
of Christ the Savior.
Public statements by government officials and anecdotal evidence from
religious minority groups suggest that the Russian Orthodox Church, in
some cases may enjoy a status that approaches official. For example, religious
minority groups based abroad have complained that customs officials at
times have forwarded religious literature to the Russian Orthodox Church
before approving its entry into the country. On October 6, 2000, NTV reported
that then-Minister of Interior Rushaylo told a group that he was worried
about the spread of various religious "cults" in Russia. He said that his
ministry works closely with the Russian Orthodox Church in the interest
of spiritual education and strengthening the moral fiber of Ministry of
Interior personnel. Rushaylo admitted that relations with the Orthodox
Church were much better than with Muslims, most likely because of the absence
of a clear hierarchical structure in the organizations of the latter.
On October 17, 2000, NTV reported that the PolPred for the Urals region,
Petr Latyshev, called for "strategic coordination" between the Russian
Orthodox Church and the State on the basis of the Constitution and laws.
Latyshev added that while all "traditional religious denominations" enjoy
equal rights before the law, "we should admit that in our state Orthodoxy
was and remains the foundation. We will resist any foreign spiritual expansion,
taking every measure to help Orthodoxy without infringing on the rights
of traditional religions." The Web site, "strana.ru," reported on December
18, 2000, that Latyshev had signed agreements, the first between a PolPred
and the Church, with the Russian Orthodox hierarchy in Chelyabinsk, Yekaterinburg,
Tobolsk, and Kurgan. In addition, the Southern regional PolPred, Viktor
Kazantsev, has espoused publicly positions reflecting discrimination against
certain non-Orthodox denominations. For example, the Stavropol newspaper
Verst reported April 10, 2001 that Kazantsev asked the Russian Orthodox
Church for help in fighting so-called "cults." In the article, Kazantsev
complained that Mormons are taking over the Volgograd region, as are Krishnas
in Cherkessya, Satanists and Pagan cults in Dagestan, Protestants in Kalmykiya,
and Jehovah's Witnesses in Krasnodar and Stavropol. Kazantsev said, "We
need to recognize without giving offense that the Russian State is primarily
Orthodox, and we should behave accordingly." At the request of the Church,
Kazantsev offered to help institute a course in public schools on Orthodoxy
by the next school year.
NTV reported on October 29, 2000, that Minister of Tax Genadiy Bukayev
and Patriarch Aleksiy II signed a cooperation agreement between the Tax
Ministry and the Church. According to the agreement, "The parties will
work together in preparing and conducting seminars and consultations on
the most significant questions of taxation of religious organizations and
in developing and executing a program in the socio-cultural sphere." On
November 28, 2000, Tass news service reported that Rushaylo told a group
of representatives from religious groups in Novosibirsk that there was
a need to "neutralize sects preaching religious extremism." Rushaylo blamed
so-called "Wahhabism" for initiating the conflict in Dagestan and Chechnya
and called for "consolidating cooperation between law enforcement bodies
and various religious confessions to tackle jointly prevention of religious
extremism in Russia."
The Procurator General has been criticized by human rights activists
and religious minority denominations for encouraging legal action against
some minority religions and recommending, as authoritative, reference materials
that are biased against Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, and others. In correspondence
with the public and government officials from other ministries, the Procurator
has recommended literature that is extremely biased and is published by
the Russian Orthodox Church. For example, in a letter to the Chelyabinsk
Human Rights Ombudsman that came to light during a recent trial, the procurator's
office responded to a request for information about Jehovah's Witnesses
by recommending a publication by the Missionary Section of the Russian
Orthodox Church entitled "New Religious Organizations in Russia of a Destructive
and Occult Nature." In addition, the Procurator has distributed a 1999
manual entitled "Activities of Religious Groups. Psychological and Juridical
Aspects: Informational Resource Work for Procurator Personnel," to all
regional branches of the procuracy. The manual contains biased descriptions
of groups such as the Jehovah's Witnesses, the Mormons, the Unification
Church, and Scientology. Also, the manual appears to provide instructions
on how to generate criminal cases against these groups, including sample
letters from distraught parents of members of these denominations. After
Duma deputy Sergey Kovalev lodged a formal complaint to the Procurator
General, a copy of an internal expert analysis was forwarded in response.
In the opinion of the Procurator's expert panel, "the authors of the manual
in no way instigate religious strife," but rather direct procurator personnel
to implement the law on freedom of conscience precisely and correctly."
According to Ministry of Justice figures in May 2001, approximately
18,130 organizations were reregistered or registered anew, while 2,095
(10 percent of 20,215) organizations are subject to liquidation (elimination
of legal status as a juridical person). This represents an increase of
over 1200 organizations officially registered since the 1997 religion law
went into effect. Ministry of Justice officials estimate that as of May
2001, nearly 100 organizations have been liquidated through court proceedings.
The majority of such organizations may exist on paper only. However, some
of them appear to have been liquidated after the failure of repeated attempts
to register with the local branch of the Ministry of Justice. The "Victory
of Faith" Pentecostal church in Amursk (Khaborovsk region), for example,
was liquidated after repeated attempts to reregister. The local branch
of the Ministry of Justice issued a January 25 order to initiate liquidation
proceedings, indicating that local authorities ignored oral instructions
from federal officials to refrain from initiating liquidation proceedings
until February. Eleven affiliated churches that fell under the "Victory
of Faith" local religious organization were affected by the liquidation.
Church officials and religious freedom advocates claim that the head of
the Khabarovsk administration Department of Religion engaged in a campaign
against the region's Pentecostals, hindering the church's registration
efforts and harassing visiting foreign missionaries with frivolous bureaucratic
exercises, such as unnecessary document checks and challenges to valid
visas, in an attempt to discourage missionaries from staying in the region.
As of end of the period covered by this report, it was unclear whether
federal officials would intervene.
Two other groups that experienced problems in reregistering were the
Salvation Army and Jehovah's Witnesses. Both have attempted repeatedly
to reregister their Moscow local religious organizations without success.
In the case of the Salvation Army, it contested the Moscow local branch
of the Ministry of Justice's refusal of registration twice in municipal
courts, losing both cases. The experience severely hampered the organization's
activities as Moscow officials temporarily refrained from cooperating on
charity projects, and landlords hesitated to renew leases citing imminent
liquidation. The Salvation Army finally succeeded in registering as a centralized
religious organization at the federal level in December 2000, but efforts
to reverse the denial of registration to the Moscow local organization
faced further court challenges at the end of the period covered by this
report.
Jehovah's Witnesses unsuccessfully have attempted to reregister the
Moscow community of Jehovah's Witnesses, filing an appeal with a municipal
court challenging the refusal. As of mid-2001, the case had not come to
trial. The municipal judge has postponed the case five times.
In a separate case in Moscow, not originally based on the 1997 law,
Jehovah's Witnesses are fighting an attempt by the Procurator to ban the
local religious organization on the grounds that it is a danger to society.
On February 23, 2001, the Golovinskiy municipal court in Moscow ruled against
the Procurator, finding no basis to the accusations. However, the Procurator
challenged this ruling successfully in a court of appeal, which sent the
case back to the Golovinskiy court. Legal proceedings were continuing at
the end of the period covered by this report.
Jehovah's Witnesses indicate that they have experienced problems in
reregistering in other locations as well, including Tver, Chelyabinsk,
and Kabardino-Balkaria. Legal proceedings in these areas were underway
in mid-2001. In Kabardino-Balkariya three local religious organizations
of Jehovah's Witnesses were refused reregistration repeatedly, and on April
24, 2001, a judge in Nalchik ordered the Ministry of Justice to reregister
the groups. However, the Ministry refused to do so and challenged the decision.
In addition, on May 14 a Jehovah's Witnesses local religious organization
in the same region was liquidated in separate proceedings. In a number
of regions, including Tatarstan, Tula, Lipetsk and Oryol, registration
was successfully achieved through the courts. Jehovah's Witnesses have
managed to reregister the vast majority of their previously existing religious
organizations (199) and a religious center, despite a handful of difficult
cases. Combined with newly registered organizations, they recorded a total
of over 300 registered local organizations in 70 regions as of the end
of the period covered by this report.
Some religious minority denominations accuse the FSB, Procurator, and
other official agencies, of increasingly harassment of certain "nontraditional"
denominations, in particular, Pentecostals, Scientologists, Jehovah's Witnesses,
and the Unification Church. Churches have been targeted for ostensible
criminal investigations, landlords have been pressured to renege on contracts,
and in some cases the security services may have influenced the Ministry
of Justice in registration applications.
The Church of Scientology has experienced many problems with both registration
and with harassment from the authorities. Since 1999, in particular, the
Moscow Scientology Church has come under intense pressure from the authorities.
The Procurator formally charged the Church with criminal activities, including
distributing medicine illegally. The case was brought to court, but on
December 7, 2000, the court returned the case to law enforcement authorities
for further investigation because of irregularities in the Procurator's
case. In January 2001, the case was resumed but subsequently was dismissed
for lack of evidence. The Procurator appealed; however, on May 19 the appellate
court upheld the lower court's ruling clearing the Scientologists of all
charges. The Church of Scientology reportedly is now considering a legal
challenge to the Ministry of Justice's refusal to reregister it. The Church
reports that the authorities have impeded the operation of its centers
in Dmitrograd, Khabarovsk, Izhevsk, and other localities.
The Moscow Jewish Community, an organization involved in an intraconfessional
dispute, came under intense scrutiny from the tax police, the Office of
Visa Registration, and the Ministry of Interior for alleged criminal activities.
In one instance, the attention came after an unresolved incident of violence
within the community. The Commmunity, which is presently registered as
a local religious organization, has sought to change its status to that
of a central religious organization, but this application has been rejected
by the Ministry of Justice's Moscow Administration, the same office that
has impeded registration efforts by the Salvation Army and Jehovah's Witnesses.
However, most of the law enforcement activities directed against the community
appeared to be related to a political dispute between former President
of the Russian Jewish Congress, Vladimir Gusinskiy, and the Government.
The office of the Procurator General has harassed Krishna believers
with a series of frivolous investigations, including examining literature
in order to make an expert opinion of whether the beliefs are harmful to
society. In at least one instance in late 2000, experts found no basis
to the charge that Krishna beliefs represent a danger, but the case was
sent back for further evaluation with the possibility of future legal action.
The Mormons have succeeded in registering 35 local religious organizations.
However, in several regions local officials impeded registration. For example,
since mid-1998 the Mormons have attempted unsuccessfully to register a
local religious organization in Kazan, Tatarstan. The Mormons successfully
challenged the refusal in court, and the local branch of the Ministry of
Justice registered the group. However, the Tatarstan authorities revoked
the organization's registration. The Mormons maintain that this action
was illegal. The Mormons also have had difficulty in securing visas for
some of their foreign missionaries coming to Russia; in particular, they
have had difficulties with the Vladivostok branch of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs. The Mormons also have had problems in procuring residency permits
for missionaries in regions such as Chelyabinsk and Kazan. They assert
that the authorities in some areas, including Chelyabinsk, have impeded
foreign religious workers from registering, presumably to restrict foreign
proselytizing. They also experienced trouble in obtaining permission to
build and then occupy an assembly hall in Volgograd; the building was completed
eventually, but municipal officials have delayed issuing permission to
use the completed building. The local branch of the Ministry of Justice
in Chelyabinsk continues to reject the local Mormons' registration application
based on the alleged incompatibility of Mormon activities with federal
law. The Chelyabinsk Directorate of Justice also has rejected the registration
applications of Baptist, Adventist, and Pentecostal churches on similar
grounds.
Roman Catholic religious workers also experienced problems in obtaining
desired residency permits and visas. Catholic workers who are assigned
full time to parishes in Irkutsk and Samara must go abroad once a year
to renew their visas, unlike other foreign workers who can apply for multiple-entry
visas or extend their stays. Unlike some other religious workers who obtained
permanent residency or citizenship on the basis of marriage to Russian
citizens, celibate Catholic clergy do not have this opportunity.
Authorities continued to refuse visas to a number of other missionaries,
apparently as a result of earlier conflicts with the authorities. Individuals
denied visas include Dan Pollard, formerly of the Vanino Baptist Church
in Khabarovsk region, and David Binkley of the Church of Christ in Magadan,
who were denied visas in spite of having been acquitted on tax and customs
charges, and Charles Landreth of the Church of Christ in Volgograd who
had been accused in the local press of being a spy. A fourth missionary,
Monty Race of the Evangelical Free Church of America, who entered the country
legally with a visa sponsored by a Moscow congregation, was refused registration
to reside in Naberezhniy Chelniy, Tartarstan. Race, who is married to a
Russian citizen and has two children, has also been refused permission
to register as a resident foreign spouse of a citizen. The letter of refusal
he received from the Ministry of Internal Affairs's local passport control
office cites "national security" concerns.
Disputes concerning the return of religious property confiscated during
the Soviet era are cited by religious groups as a source of concern to
a number of communities. According to the Presidential Administration,
since the 1993 decree went into effect 4,000 buildings have been returned
to religious groups. Approximately 3,500 of these were to the Russian Orthodox
Church. About 15,000 religious articles, including icons, torahs, and other
items, have been returned to religious groups. For the most part, properties
of other faiths used for religious services, including synagogues, churches
and mosques, have been returned as well, although some in the Jewish community
assert that only a small portion of the total properties confiscated under
Soviet rule have been returned. On March 15, 2001, Prime Minister Kasyanov
ordered the Restitution Commission to cease its activities. Despite the
cessation of the Commission's activities, a number of properties and objects
have not been returned. For example, the Jewish community, which has met
with some success on communal property restitution, is seeking the return
of a number of synagogues around the country, of religious scrolls, and
of cultural and religious artifacts such as the Schneerson book collection
(a revered collection of the Chabad Lubavitch).
Reports continue that some local and municipal governments prevented
religious groups from using venues, such as cinemas, suitable for large
gatherings. In many areas of the country, government-owned facilities are
the only available venues. As a result, in some cases congregations that
do not have their own property effectively have been denied the opportunity
to practice their faith in large gatherings. For example, Sergey Ryakhovskiy's
Pentecostal church, "The Moscow Church of God of Christians of the Evangelical
Faith," learned in March 2001 that a local theater that for years had provided
space for the Church's meetings reneged on a longstanding agreement after
what the Church claims were threats by authorities. According to an April
12, 2001, Keston News Service report, the theater director was summoned
to the Culture Committee of the Moscow Regional Administration where he
received a letter from the chairman of the committee asking him to cancel
his agreement with the church. The theater director reportedly told Ryakhovskiy
that the Moscow governor's administration was reacting to an FSB report
on the church. Although the governor's office denied these allegations
to the Keston correspondent, the theater director refused to confirm or
deny the allegations, citing a fear that he might lose his job. Similarly,
according to a December 1, 2000, report on NTV, municipal authorities in
Penza prevented members of the Protestant church "Living Faith" from using
a rented movie theater. The congregation was forced to move to a dilapidated
building without heat, where temperatures during the winter reached 15
degrees below zero centigrade. The Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, which
does not recognize Patriarch Aleksiy's authority, has had numerous problems
obtaining access to places for gathering. According to Keston News Service,
as of April 2001, only a small percentage of the Church's 100 parishes
meet in a building. Keston speculated that local officials appear reluctant
to provide buildings to Orthodox churches not affiliated with the Moscow
Patriarch.
According to a May 14, 2001 Keston report, the Vyborg region's chief
architect refuses to allow a Protestant congregation to restore or use
a building it bought in 1998. Authorities have refused to rezone the site
for public (rather than industrial) use. Regional authorities who are attempting
to remove a historic mosque have harassed Muslims in Vologda. Keston reported
on May 11, 2001, that after the regional government lost its case in the
Russian Supreme Court, the Muslim community was subjected to financial
investigations, which the community claims are frivolous. Authorities in
Sayanogorsk, in the Republic of Khakasiya, also have refused to allow the
Pentecostal Church "Glory" to rent or use public space, despite the fact
that the Church is registered and has approached the municipal administration
repeatedly. Muslims in the Komi Republic and the Karelian regional capital
of Petrozavodsk have not been able to build mosques because of what many
believe is societal prejudice against Islam. On April 10, 2001, Keston
News Service reported that Taganrog authorities ordered the Muslim community
to demolish its mosque. Muslims claim that the order is based on anti-Muslim
bias and refuse to carry it out. Hare Krishna leaders in Moscow have sought
unsuccessfully for several years to acquire property to build a new temple
and center. The Hare Krishna face eviction from the current center as a
result of the construction of a new road. Jehovah's Witnesses and Baptists
in Moscow and other regions continue to have trouble leasing assembly space
and obtaining the necessary permits to renovate buildings.
In Belgorod region, the regional parliament enacted a law restricting
missionary activity, including the use of venues in which religious meetings
could be held. Foreigners visiting the region are forbidden to engage in
missionary activity or to preach unless the conduct of missionary activity
had been stated in their visas (some groups reportedly sent religious workers
on business or tourist visas in order not to alert the authorities to their
activities). Protestant representatives in the region sent a letter of
protest to the authorities asserting that the law was in conflict with
the Russian constitution. No information was available as of the end of
the period covered by this report concerning any attempts to enforce this
law. Federal authorities have acknowledged that the Belgorod law is unconstitutional
and at the end of the period covered by this report were working with the
Oblast authorities to modify it.
Government authorities have been criticized for a long time for insufficient
action to counter the prejudice and societal discrimination encountered
by Jews and Muslims; however, over the last year the Presidential Administration
has been much more vigorous in speaking out against prejudice and societal
discrimination. President Putin and officials in his administration have
made strong statements on the need for tolerance in a multiethnic Russia
and have spoken out against anti-Semitism. Nonetheless, according to human
rights activists and NGO's, anti-Semitism is still a significant part of
the mindset of some Russian politicians and their constituents. Communist
Duma Deputy Vasiliy Shandybin often has made derogatory references about
Jews in public. For example, after the recent change in NTV management
in April 2001, Shandybin complained that the Russian newsman Yevgeniy Kiselev
had been replaced by the "American Zionist" Boris Jordan. In April 2001,
when a Duma deputy proposed that deputies recognize the Jewish victims
of the Holocaust, both Shandybin and his Russian Liberal Democratic Party
colleague Vladimir Zhirinovskiy shouted down the proposal, complaining
that no one was recognizing Russian victims. However, in May 2001, Duma
deputy Aleksandr Fedulov proposed a resolution calling on President Putin
to condemn anti-Semitism. The resolution was supported almost unanimously
by the pro-government Yedinstvo faction, but did not garner enough votes
to pass. The Communist faction voted unanimously against it.
In September 2000, a blatantly anti-Semitic article allegedly written
by an official in the Presidential Administration appeared in the newspaper,
Nezavisimaya Gazeta. As of the end of the period covered by this report,
the Government had not confirmed whether or not the official was indeed
a member of its administration at the time of writing. Kursk Governor Mikhaylov
made anti-Semitic remarks to the press in late November 2000. PolPred Poltavchenko
reprimanded the governor in public and forced him to issue an apology.
During the 2000 gubernatorial elections, candidates' supporters in
a number of regions resorted to anti-Semitism. Central Elections Commission
Head Aleksandr Veshnyakov in December 2000 strongly criticized the use
of anti-Semitism in election campaigns and urged candidates to refrain
from inciting ethnic or religious intolerance. After a series of "skinhead"
attacks in Moscow in May 2001, President Putin, Deputy Prime Minister Matviyenko,
and Moscow Mayor Yuriy Luzhkov all condemned such "hate crimes" and emphasized
the country's multiethnic character.
The Government has implemented partially an interagency program to
combat extremism and promote religious and ethnic tolerance. Broad in scope,
the original plan called for a large number of interagency measures, such
as the review of federal and regional legislation on extremism, mandatory
training for public officials on how to promote ethnic and religious tolerance,
and new educational materials for use in public educational institutions.
Implementation of the plan, which is guided by an interagency commission
on combating extremism headed by the Ministry of Education, was sporadic.
Nevertheless, at least one NGO was able to work parallel to the program,
participating in training law enforcement and other government officials
(both local and federal) in promoting tolerance. The Saint Petersburg NGO
Harold and Selma Light Center, in conjunction with a foreign-based NGO,
conducted successful programs in several northwestern cities such as Petrozavodsk,
and has now turned its attention to Ryazan.
In November 1998, the Duma adopted a resolution condemning public statements
damaging to interethnic relations in the country. A Government review of
the implementation of existing laws against acts of national, racial, and
religious hatred reported that 25 criminal investigations were conducted
in 1998, and that 10 were opened by June 1999. The Ministry of Justice
reported that 17 crimes were investigated under these statutes in 2000.
Eight of these cases ended up in court. However, there is no information
as to the number of convictions that resulted. Duma deputy Fedulov, during
a public debate in May, claimed that only one conviction was obtained.
The Moscow City Duma adopted the law forbidding the distribution and display
of Nazi symbols in May 1999, and the Moscow regional Duma passed similar
legislation in June 1999. As of April 2001, Moscow City Duma deputies were
attempting to introduce amendments clarifying procedures for implementation
of this law.
In June 2000, a schism in the Jewish Community led to the election
by the Federation of Jewish Communities of Lubavitcher Rabbi Berel Lazar
as Chief Rabbi of Russia over Rabbi Adolf Shayevich of the Moscow Choral
Synagogue. Many in the Jewish community believe that the Government took
sides in the dispute, showing overt support and preference for Lazar -
for example, making him the sole representative of the Jewish community
on the Administration's Religious Affairs Council -- over the opposing
faction, which was associated with media magnate Vladimir Gusinskiy, the
then-President of the Russian Jewish Congress and a critic of the Russian
Government. Under the leadership of the new president of the Russian Jewish
Congress, Leonid Nevzlin, relations between that organization and the authorities
appeared to have changed for the better. Critics point to President Putin's
two special appearances during 2000 at events associated with Lazar, but
other observers pointed out that Deputy Prime Minister Valentina Matviyenko,
PolPred Grigoriy Poltavchenko, and other Presidential Administration officials
attended and delivered remarks at the May 15, 2001 rededication of the
Moscow Choral Synagogue (associated with Rabbi Shayevich).
In October 2000, Ministry of Interior and tax police entered the Moscow
Choral Synagogue and conducted what community members believe to have been
an illegal search of the premises. Members of the community accused the
Government of employing law enforcement officials against a Gusinskiy-aligned
community for political purposes. No charges resulted from the search.
However, when it came time to renew the visa registration of the Moscow
Chief Rabbi, who presides over the Choral Synagogue, authorities delayed
issuing the renewal until the last minute, giving rise to more allegations
of interference in religious affairs. The reorganization of the Presidential
Council for Cooperation with Religious Organizations in February 2001 led
to more allegations of interference after it became known that longtime
member Rabbi Shayevich had lost his position and that Rabbi Lazar would
serve as the sole representative for Russian Jewry.
Abuses of Religious Freedom
There were no official reports of religious detainees or prisoners.
However, during a November 17, 2000, legal motion by the Chelyabinsk procurator
to liquidate a Unification Church social organization, official documents
revealed that member Galina Derevskova had been hospitalized against her
will by the authorities in a psychiatric ward for 9 days while they attempted
to gather evidence against the group. They reportedly forced Derevskova
to sign a document after her internment stating that she had submitted
herself to the institution for evaluation voluntarily. She was released
with no indication of mental health problems.
Keston News Service reported April 19, 2001, that a Court sentenced
Aleksandr Volkov from Novocheboksariy to 6 months in prison on March 13,
2001, for refusing to perform military service. Volkov, a Pentecostal Christian,
refused to serve because of religious convictions.
Mormon missionaries throughout the country frequently were detained
for brief periods or asked by local police to cease their activities, regardless
of whether they were actually in violation of local statutes on picketing.
The Independent Psychiatric Association of Russia, along with several
human rights organizations, have criticized the use of psychiatry in "deprogramming"
victims of "totalitarian sects." In such cases, authorities use pseudo-psychological
and spiritual techniques to "treat" persons who were members of new religious
groups. There were no confirmed instances of this taking place during the
period covered by this report.
Forced Religious Conversion
There were no reports of forced religious conversion, including of
minor U.S. citizens abducted or illegally removed from the United States,
or of the Government's refusal to allow such citizens to be returned to
the United States.
Improvements and Positive Developments in Respect for Religious Freedom
The President and other government officials have been increasingly
vocal about the need for societal tolerance in a multiethnic and multi-confessional
society. While individual Russian politicians continue at times to make
anti-Semitic statements, President Putin and his Presidential Administration
have taken a very public stand against anti-Semitism and reached out to
the Jewish community, including, in the last months of the reporting period,
to both factions vying for leadership. President Putin has revamped the
office in his Administration that deals with religious affairs and that
office appears to be receptive to minority denominations' complaints and
in some instances has assisted in resolving problems in the regions. The
Presidential Administration co-sponsored a conference bringing together
government officials from the regions, scholars, lawyers, NGOs and members
of faith-based organizations.
Section III. Societal Attitudes
While religious matters are not a source of societal hostility for
most citizens, relations between different religious organizations are
frequently tense, particularly at the leadership level, and there continue
to be instances of religiously motivated violence. Many Russians believe
that at least nominal adherence to the Russian Orthodox Church is at the
heart of what it means to be Russian, and Russian Orthodoxy is considered
in conservative nationalist circles as the de facto official religion of
the country.
There is no large-scale movement in the country to promote interfaith
dialog, although on the local level religious groups successfully collaborate
on charity projects and participate in interfaith dialog. Russian Pentecostal
and Baptist organizations, as well as the Russian Orthodox Church, have
been reluctant to support ecumenism. Traditionally, the Russian Orthodox
Church has pursued interfaith dialog with other Christians on the international
level. However, representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church expressed
grave reservations about the Pope's June 2001 visit to Ukraine, and the
visit gave rise to a number of hostile statements by clerics and parliamentarians.
The Patriarch has conditioned any future visit to Russia by the Pope on
the settlement of outstanding issues between the two Churches.
Muslims, who constitute approximately 10 percent of the population,
continue to encounter societal discrimination and antagonism in some areas
where they are a minority. In October 2000, Muslim groups complained about
a biased film on Russian Muslims entitled "Half Moon of the Caucasus" that
aired on the state television channel, Russian State Television (RTR).
The film portrays Muslims as affiliated with extremist forces in Chechnya
and as disruptive to society. Muslims also have complained that citizens
in certain regions have an irrational fear of Muslims, citing cases such
as a recent dispute in Kolomna over the proposed construction of a mosque.
Keston News Service reported on May 4, 2001, that Mufti Ravil Gainutdin
complained that a Russian Orthodox Church priest in Kolomna called on the
public to oppose construction of the mosque. Discriminatory attitudes have
become stronger since the onset of the conflict in Chechnya in 1999. Authorities,
journalists, and the public have been quick to label Muslims or Muslim
organizations "Wahhabi," a term which has become equivalent with "extremists."
For example, NTV reported on March 11, 2001, that Mordovian State University
had instituted a careful selection process intended to exclude potential
"Wahhabists." The university did not specify what criteria would be used
in establishing who fit such a category. Such sentiment has led to a formal
ban on "Wahhabism" in Dagestan and Kabardino-Balkharia.
A continuing pattern of violence, with either religious or political
motivations, against religious workers in the North Caucasus was evident
during the period covered by this report. Muslim separatists targeted Russian
Orthodox priests for killing in Chechnya. Several Muslim clerics in Chechnya
have been killed during the period covered by this report as well, including
Magomed Khasuyev, Imam Umar Idrisov, and Imams Mudayev, and Umalatov who
were all killed in January 2001.
Jewish emigration rates are significantly lower than in the last years
of the Soviet period. The number of Jews emigrating to Israel for economic
reasons as well as fear of persecution increased approximately 70 percent
in 1998, but has decreased since. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported
on March 19, 2001, that the total number of immigrants from the former
Soviet Union (including Russia) to Israel decreased by 45 percent in the
first 10 weeks of 2001, compared to the same period in 2000. According
to Mikhail Chlenov, a Russian Jewish leader, the decrease in emigration
is attributable to lower stress among the population.
Jews continue to encounter manifestations of societal discrimination.
Anti-Semitic acts continue, and human rights groups have called for stronger
governmental action to counter anti-Semitic acts. In September 2000, a
group of extremists attacked a school in Ryazan where Jewish religious
and cultural classes were being held, threatening faculty members and vandalizing
the premises. By mid-2000 only one individual has been identified as responsible.
After being detained briefly, the suspect was released and ostensibly disappeared.
Authorities claim the suspect is on the "All Russia Wanted list." Following
the incident, anti-Semitic news articles appeared in Ryazan newspapers
blaming the Jews themselves for the incident. During the gubernatorial
campaign in January, anti-Semitic graffiti appeared around the city. According
to the Union of Councils for Soviet Jewry (UCSJ), which monitors anti-Semitism
in the various regions of the country, a punk rock concert held in Tver
in March 2001 featured a band "Pagan Reign" who screamed anti-Semitic slogans
such as "Beat the Yids! Save Russia!" Several Jewish cemeteries have been
vandalized, including the cemeteries in Nizhniy Novgorod and Samara. The
Russian news website "lenta.ru" reported on March 19, 2001, that a Samara
judge declared Mikhail Pankov, the head of a local group of "Satanists"
who were responsible for the vandalism, to be insane and sent him to a
psychiatric institution for forced treatment. On April 25, 2001, Glasnost
News Service reported that the memorial to Jewish soldiers killed in World
War II, that was due to be opened May 9, 2001, in Vladikavkaz, was completely
destroyed by unknown vandals.
On May 29, 2001, UCSJ released a special report on anti-Semitism in
academia, citing prominent professors and university administration officials
in the Altay region, Vladimir, Pskov, and Saint Petersburg who have expressed,
either in their publications or in a public forum, anti-Semitic views.
The report details how these regional educators and administrators propagate
conspiracy theories about Jews and promote negative Jewish stereotypes.
Nonetheless, UCSJ acknowledges that such academics represent only a minority.
The ultranationalist and anti-Semitic Russian National Unity (RNE)
paramilitary organization, formerly led by Aleksandr Barkashov, appears
to have splintered and lost political influence in many regions since its
peak in 1998. Although reliable figures on its membership are not available,
the RNE claimed a membership of 50,000 in 24 federation chapters in 1999.
The RNE continues to be active in some regions, such as Voronezh, and RNE
graffiti has appeared in a number of cities, including Krasnodar. The cities
of Tver and Nizhniy Novgorod registered "Russian Rebirth," a splinter group
of the RNE, which in turn prompted protests from human rights groups including
the UCSJ. However, in several regions such as Moscow and Karelia, authorities
have successfully limited the activities of the RNE by not registering
their local affiliates. Representatives of the Church of Scientology accuse
RNE and other ultra-nationalist organizations of violence or threats of
violence against their activities in a number of Russian cities, including
Nizhny Novgorod, Barnaul, and Ekaterinburg.
Anti-Semitic themes continue to figure in some local publications around
the country, unchallenged by local authorities. However, traditionally
anti-Semitic publications with large distributions, such as the newspaper
Zavtra, while still pursuing such anti-Semitic themes as the portrayal
of Russian oligarchs as exclusively Jewish, appear to be more careful than
in the past about using crude anti-Semitic language.
As so-called "nontraditional" religions in the country continue to
grow, many citizens, influenced by negative reports in the mass media and
public criticism by Russian Orthodox Church officials and other influential
figures, such as anticult activist Aleksandr Dvorkin, continue to feel
hostility toward "foreign sects." During the Jubilee Bishops' Conference
of the Russian Orthodox Church, August 13-16, 2000, the Church issued a
document entitled "Fundamental Principles of the Russian Orthodox Church's
Relations with Other Faiths." In the document the Church identifies denominations
such as Jehovah's Witnesses and Mormons as proselytizing "cults" whose
operations on the "canonical" territory of Russia must be stopped. According
to the document, the mission of other "traditional" confessions is possible
only under the condition that they refrain from proselytizing or tempting
the faithful away from the Church with material goods.
Jewish groups, led by FEOR head Rabbi Berel Lazar, have taken a strong
public stance against groups such as "Jews for Jesus," and have coordinated
with the Russian Orthodox Church and other groups to fight the spread of
so-called "cults" and "foreign missionaries." Activists in Rostov Velikiy
picketed the proposed site for the construction of a Jehovah's Witnesses
center on April 20, 2001, proclaiming their opposition to "totalitarian
cults." Nizhniy Novgorod hosted a conference entitled "Totalitarian Cults:
Threat of the XXI Century," which featured a number of presentations from
both Russian and foreign "anticult" activists. The conference materials
depicted such groups as Pentecostals, Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, the
Unification Church, and Scientology as "cults," despite the fact that all
have legal status.
Members of some religions, including some Protestant groups, Jehovah's
Witnesses, Unification Church, Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, and the
Mormons, continued to face discrimination in their ability to rent premises
and conduct group activities (see Section II). In August 2000, a group
of extremists attacked members of Jehovah's Witnesses congregation and
a Mormon assembly in Volgograd. As of mid-2001, no one had been charged
with this crime despite the fact that the victims identified at least one
of the suspects. According to Blagovest Info News Agency, on April 17,
2001, an Evangelical church in the Moscow Oblast city of Chekhov was burned
to the ground. The incident occurred after a number of threats from "anticult"
activists. In the same city, according to NTV, evangelical efforts to show
a "Jesus" film in January 2001 were blocked by authorities who first instructed
several institutes of culture to cancel an earlier agreement to show the
film and, after protests, forbade all public events at the time because
of an alleged flu epidemic (other holiday events apparently took place).
Section IV. U.S. Government Policy
The U.S. Government has continued to engage the Government, a number
of religious denominations and groups, NGO's, and others in a steady dialog
on religious freedom. The U.S. Embassy in Moscow and the Consulates General
in Yekaterinburg, St. Petersburg, and Vladivostok have been active throughout
the period covered by this report in investigating reports of violations
of religious freedom, including anti-Semitic incidents. U.S. Government
officials engage a broad range of Russian officials, representatives of
religious groups, and human rights activists on a daily basis. These contacts
include: government officials; representatives of over 20 religious confessions;
the Institute for Religion and Law; the Slavic Law and Justice Center;
the "Esther" Legal Information Center; the Anti-Defamation League; lawyers
representing religious groups; journalists; academics; and human rights
activists known for their commitment to religious freedom.
The Ambassador publicly criticized in the strongest terms the attacks
on the Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses in Volgograd, as well as the attack
on the Ryazan school where Jewish students were studying, calling on the
Government for vigorous investigation of these crimes. The Ambassador traveled
to Ryazan soon after the latter incident and presided over a roundtable
of representatives from different ethnic and religious groups, including
the Jewish community, and regional administration officials, to promote
discussion of tolerance. The Embassy has worked with NGO's to encourage
the development of programs designed to sensitize law enforcement officials
and municipal and regional administration officials to discrimination,
prejudice, and crimes committed on the basis of ethnic or religious intolerance.
Embassy officials have met numerous Russian and American groups affiliated
with the many religious denominations present in the country, participating
in exchanges of opinion and conducting briefings on the status of religious
freedom.
Senior Embassy officials discuss religious freedom with high-ranking
officials in the Presidential Administration and the Government (including
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs), raising specific cases of concern. Russian
federal officials have responded by investigating those cases and keeping
Embassy staff informed on issues they have raised.
The Embassy played a role in resolving visa registration cases of several
foreign religious workers of different denominations. The Embassy and consulates
also have repeatedly investigated and raised with federal and local authorities
problems experienced by individual missionaries, including the refusal
of visas or registration. As implementation of the 1997 Religion Law continues,
the Embassy maintains frequent contact with working-level officials at
the Ministry of Justice, Presidential Administration, and Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
In Washington as well as in Russia, the U.S. Government presses for
adherence to international standards of religious freedom in the Russian
Federation. Officials in the State Department meet regularly with U.S.-based
human rights groups and religious organizations concerned about religious
freedom in Russia as well as with visiting Russian representatives of religious
organization. The 1997 Law on Religious Freedom has been the subject of
numerous high-level communications between members of the executive branch
of the U.S. Government and the Russian Government, involving the President,
the Vice President, including the President, the Vice President, the Secretary
of State and other senior U.S. officials. On May 10, 2000, as part of a
continuing exchange of information on the status of religious freedom in
Russia, senior State Department officials, including Undersecretary for
Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky, together with Senator Gordon Smith and
National Security Council Senior Director for Europe and Eurasia, Dan Fried,
participated in a round table with representatives of religious communities
to examine the state of religious freedom in Russia. An earlier roundtable
had been held in September, 2000. An official of the Office of International
Religious Freedom made a presentation in the June 2000 Moscow Conference
co-sponsored by the Presidential Administration (see Section III), where
she stressed the importance of respecting the rights of minority religions.
Released on October 26, 2001