E/CN.4/2004/63
page 14
Nigeria
70.
The first two communications are dealt with in paragraphs 80 to 83 of the interim report.
71.
The third concerns reports that acts of religious violence have caused 15 deaths
since 8 June 2003 in the town of Numan. Gangs of Christian youths are said to have set fire
to several mosques in the town and to have been responsible for violence in neighbouring
villages.
Uzbekistan
72.
The first two communications are dealt with in paragraphs 102 to 107 of the interim
report.
73.
In letters dated 10 and 18 July 2003, the Government provides a detailed reply to
these two communications. With regard to the difficulties encountered by Jehovah’s Witnesses,
the Government replies that the latter belonged to an unregistered religious organization and
points out that, in several of the cases mentioned by the Special Rapporteur, members of this
community had received fines and prison sentences for offering illegal religious instruction
and, in one case, for committing acts that “offended the religious and atheistic convictions of
citizens with a view to inciting religious-based hatred against certain groups”. The difficulties
encountered by other Christian minorities are explained in a similar way (they are unregistered
and offer illegal religious instruction).
74.
With regard to the conditions for Muslims in prison No. 6461, the Government points out
that they had been able to observe Ramadan and had not been punished for doing so. According
to the Government, the information contained in the open letter from 22 Muslim prisoners did
not correspond to reality. The letter’s signatories included prisoners who regularly broke
prison rules and the letter had been sent after an incident on 17 April 2003 related to discipline
in the workplace that had no effect on the exercise of prisoners’ freedom of religion.
Moreover, 20 of the 22 signatories had apparently been reading religious materials in May and
June 2003.
75.
The third communication concerns reports that a Pentecostal pastor from Andijan had
decided to seek asylum to protest against the conditions in which Protestants had to live in
Andijan. Among other things, the authorities reportedly refused to register the Pentecostal
Church, which prevents it from functioning normally.
76.
The fourth communication concerns reports that, as part of a policy to prohibit the
activities of Protestant churches that are not registered in Uzbekistan, the authorities in the town
of Navoi confiscated books from a Baptist mobile library on 27 September 2003 and prevented
members of the (unregistered) Baptist Church from holding a meeting.
Pakistan
77.
See paragraphs 84 and 85 of the interim report.