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Arutyunyants, had reportedly appealed to have priests sent to them but have had no
replies. In addition, authorities had also allegedly prevented death row prisoners from
having religious literature of their choice.
328. On 18 September 2003, a secret police raid on a Jehovah’s Witness meeting in
the town of Chirchik allegedly took place on the grounds that the house where they
were meeting was not registered as a church building. Yet, according to information
received, the building was in fact registered to the Jehovah’s Witnesses.
329. It was further reported that on 20 December 2003 two Jehovah’s Witnesses,
Gulya Boikova and Parakhat Narmanova, were arrested, insulted and threatened
with rape by the police in the town of Karsh. On 22 January 2004, a court case against
the women was reportedly adjourned.
330. An official in the town administration of Muinak in the autonomous
Karakalpakstan Republic has allegedly helped to have a Protestant teacher fired from
a local school on 22 July 2003 after he refused to renounce his faith. The official,
Jalgas Saidmuratov, was reported to have said that a Protestant may not work as a
school teacher in Uzbekistan, as the State was “moving towards Islam”. Yet, allegedly,
the sacking of Lepesbai Omarov violated Uzbekistan’s Constitution and religion law,
which proclaim Uzbekistan a secular State and outlaw discrimination on religious
grounds.
331. It was reported that an unregistered Protestant church in the village of Ahmad
Yassavy had been closed down on the orders of the deputy head of the Upper Chirchik
district administration, Shukhrat Tursunbayev. Police officers and local officials
allegedly burst into the Sunday service of the Friendship Church on 7 September
2003, took down the names of all those present, sealed the church and warned the
congregation that they would be prosecuted.
332. It was also reported that for the fourth time since the Peace Protestant Church
in Nukus, Karakalpakstan, was stripped of its registration in August 2000, the Church
was raided by the police during worship on 24 August 2003. Two of its leaders,
Khym-Mun Kim and Konstantin Kmit, were allegedly fined five times the
minimum monthly wage. The Church leaders have reportedly tried to reregister the
Church but to no avail.
333. Local authorities were reportedly preventing a local Baptist congregation from
meeting for worship in the village of Khalkabad in the Pap district of Namangan
region. In another incident involving Baptists, pastor Oleg Bader was allegedly
forced to change and reregister the statute of his Church. On 27 November 2003, at a
hearing of the administrative commission for Khorezm region, Pastor Bader was
reportedly fined 22,000 Uzbek sums.
334. On 29 March 2004, the Special Rapporteur transmitted a communication to the
Government in relation to information received according to which, in the first such
case since 2002, a Jehovah's Witness from Samarkand, Vladimir Kushchevoy, had
been sentenced under the criminal law for "failing to observe the prescribed manner
of communicating religious doctrine" to three years’ "corrective labour" and 20 per
cent of his wages were to be confiscated by the State. His Bible and other religious