BELARUS NEWS AND ANALYSIS

DATE:

25/02/2008

Belarus Imposes New Controls on Foreign Religious Workers

Jeremy Reynalds
ASSIST News Service

BELARUS -- Belarus has tightened its already strict regulations on foreign religious workers.

Belarus is located in Eastern Europe, east of Poland.

According to a story by Geraldine Fagan on Forum 18 News Service, the changes - which shadow elements of the restrictive 2002 Religion Law - come as Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants prepare to submit over 50,000 signatures petitioning for changes to that Law to the state authorities.

Forum 18 reported that the country's top religious affairs official now has sole discretion in deciding whether religious work by foreign citizens is necessary, according to a new Council of Ministers decree. The Plenipotentiary for Religious and Ethnic Affairs, currently Leonid Gulyako, also has the right not to give reasons for refusing a foreign religious worker's visit.

Forum 18 reported that the Gulyako can also shorten the visit "if the period of time required for realization of the aims for which the foreign citizen is invited does not correspond to that requested."

In line with the Religion Law, Forum 18 reported the Jan. 30 2008 decree states that only registered religious associations have the right to invite foreign religious workers. These consist of ten or more communities, at least one of which must have functioned in Belarus for 20 years.

The new decree's application procedure for inviting foreign religious workers is much more detailed than its 1999 predecessor, amended most recently in 2006. If invited to teach religion, for example, Forum 18 said a foreign citizen's work experience and the timetable and syllabus of the religious educational institution in question must be submitted.

According to Forum 18, foreign citizens must also now show knowledge of Belarus' state languages (Belarusian and Russian) in order to perform religious work. The only types of religious work not requiring such knowledge, or work experience, are making contact with religious organizations, and "participation in charitable or other mass events by religious organizations whose primary aim is the fulfilment of citizens' religious needs."

In other ways, however, Forum 18 reported that the Jan. 30 decree duplicates the earlier one. Foreign citizens may conduct religious work for up to a year at a time - but only within houses of worship belonging to or premises continuously rented by an association's affiliate organizations. The transfer of a foreign religious worker from one religious organization to another - such as between parishes - still requires state permission, even for a single worship service.

A Polish Catholic priest was detained after celebrating Mass in breach of this rule while passing through Minsk in Sept. 2006.

The new decree "differs significantly" from its predecessor in the view of Vladimir Lameko, assistant to the Plenipotentiary for Religious and Ethnic Affairs. The application procedure has become stricter, Forum 18 said he told the news service, with different documents now required when requesting permission for various types of religious activity.

Not stated previously, Forum 18 said he claimed, "different places could make different demands." And while national religious affairs officials used to rely on the reasoning of their regional colleagues when issuing refusals, Forum 18 reported he said, "we are more responsible for decisions now - locally they could make mistakes."

Rejecting an invitation to a foreign religious worker without explanation could happen previously, however, Lameko assured Forum 18. "There are always reasons - it isn't down to the whim of the Plenipotentiary. But they might be serious - related to state secrets. This is usual in many states."

Belarus' National Security Concept, signed by President Aleksandr Lukashenko on July 17 2001, includes "the activisation of the activity of foreign religious organizations and missionaries to monopolize the spiritual life of society" among fundamental factors posing a threat to national security in the humanitarian sphere.

It also calls, Forum 18 reported, for the counteraction of their "negative influence." Two Protestants were expelled in 2007, after being accused of harming national security.

Forum 18 commented that "national security" is not an acceptable reason to restrict freedom of thought, conscience or belief under either the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights or the Universal Declaration of Human Rights - both of which Belarus is party to.

Minsk-based religious rights lawyer Dina Shavtsova similarly suggested to Forum 18 that curtailing or refusing a visa without explanation is a generally accepted practice. However, she agreed that whereas previously Belarus did give reasons for refusals - albeit weak - the new decree's provision specifically authorizing the Plenipotentiary for Religious and Ethnic Affairs to refuse invitations without explanation will bolster such initiatives.

Shavtsova told Forum 18 the more detailed invitation procedure, particularly the different documents required for activities such as teaching or studying religion, or acting as a cleric, are the main reason for the decree.

In line with a general trend in Belarusian law over the past five years, Forum 18 said she suggested that a lack of precision in the new detail will result in more selective application. "The decree doesn't define necessary knowledge of state languages. And what is a cleric? Different religions have different criteria; some require theological qualifications, others don't. There is great potential for entirely subjective decisions."

The Catholic Church is particularly vulnerable to controls on foreign religious workers as more than half of its approximately 350 clergy in Belarus are foreign citizens. Father Alyaksandr Amyalchenya, press secretary to the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Belarus, suggested to Forum 18 that the Jan. 30 decree simply gathers elements already present in different laws, however.

Forum 18 reported that the Jewish community is the only other faith confession with a significant contingent of foreign religious workers. Vladimir Malinkin, who heads Belarus' Hassidic Union of Jewish Religious Communities, told Forum 18 that the new decree combines existing provisions in various laws. Identifying one new element as the requirement that proof of education be translated into one of Belarus' state languages and notarized, he said this was already requested in practice.

According to Forum 18, Malinkin's Union currently has six rabbis from Israel, the USA and France working in Belarus. Previously based in Bobruisk, a seventh ended up leaving the country in early 2007 after his permission to conduct religious activity was not extended, Malinkin confirmed. Israeli rabbi Borukh Lamdan is not barred from Belarus, however, and his Union's chairman is hopeful that he will be able to return to his post. Bobruisk currently has no rabbi.

Lamdan told Forum 18 that his permission for religious work was not renewed in Sept. 2006 on the grounds that he was conducting commercial activity - a charge he denies.

Foreign religious workers invited by local religious communities of various confessions are increasingly being banned.

Father Grzegorz Chudek, the most recent Polish Catholic priest forced to leave the country, did so before Christmas, according to a Catholic source in the south-eastern city of Gomel. Unable to overturn the decision not to extend his religious work permit, she told Forum 18 the Catholic Church has replaced him with another Polish priest not previously in Belarus.

Forum 18 said that Father Chudek originally had to leave by Dec. 2007, apparently due to his criticism of Belarus' social problems in the Polish press. Although he obtained a two-month visa extension, this did not include the right to work in his parish of the Holy Trinity in Rechytsa. The decree controlling religious work by foreign citizens is separate from the visa regime.

Ten Polish Catholic priests and five nuns have been forced out of Belarus since late 2005. Vice-premier Aleksandr Kosinets told a Sept. 19 2007 round table of Belarus' religious leaders that the Catholic Church should end the use of foreign clergy over the next few years.

Shortly after the new decree's publication, "the largest non-political, civil campaign in Belarusian history" - a petition to change the 2002 Religion Law - reached its target of 50,000 signatures, Protestant lawyer Sergei Lukanin told Forum 18. Campaigners now intend to hand copies of the petition over to President Aleksandr Lukashenko, parliament and the Constitutional Court.

Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants began collecting signatures for the petition in late April 2007. Nineteen campaigners were detained for doing so last summer. Forum 18 said that Vice-Premier Kosinets has previously categorically rejected calls led by the petition campaign to change the Religion Law, which is the most repressive law of its kind in Europe.

For more background information see Forum 18's Belarus religious freedom survey at www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=888.

Source:

http://www.crosswalk.com/news/religiontoday/11569037/

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