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24.10.2008
BELARUS: WHY WAS PROTESTANT BISHOP DEPORTED?


By Geraldine Fagan, Forum 18 News Service

The Ukrainian founder of one of Minsk's largest charismatic churches has
told Forum 18 News Service he suspects his 16 October deportation from
Belarus was due to his continued active participation in the local
Protestant community. The KGB secret police and state religious affairs
apparatus were monitoring that activity, Veniamin Brukh suggested to Forum
18 from Riga, Latvia, on 17 October. "They probably consider me a danger to
the state."

If so, Brukh - a bishop in the Full Gospel Church - will be the 22nd
foreign citizen to be barred from Belarus for religious activity in the
four years since 2004. Previous cases have involved Protestants and
Catholics (see most recently F18News 17 May 2007
).

International human rights standards on freedom of religion or belief do
not differentiate between the rights of citizens and non-citizens legally
present in a country. In Belarus, however, foreign citizens require special
state permission - on top of a valid entry visa - to perform a leading role
in a religious community. Under the restrictive 2002 Religion Law, only
religious associations - made up of at least ten registered religious
communities, including at least one active on the territory of Belarus for
at least 20 years - have the right to invite foreign citizens to conduct
religious activity.

Should Belarus' top religious affairs official, the Plenipotentiary for
Religious and Ethnic Affairs, deem religious work by a foreign citizen
necessary, stringent controls apply. The Plenipotentiary can refuse
religious associations' applications without explanation. Foreign citizens
may conduct religious work only within places of worship belonging to or
premises continuously rented by an association's affiliate organisations.
The transfer of a foreign religious worker from one religious organisation
to another - such as between parishes - requires additional state
permission, even for a single worship service. Under the latest decree
regulating religious work by foreign citizens, they must also attest
knowledge of Belarus' state languages, Belarusian and Russian (see F18News
20 February 2008 ).

No reasons for deportation were given to Bishop Brukh, when he flew into
Minsk Airport from the United States on the evening of 15 October. A
deportation document issued by the Belarusian Border Police, seen by Forum
18, stipulates only that the reason is "other" than the absence of a valid
travel document. A stamp placed in Brukh's passport states simply "Entry
Denied", he told Forum 18. "It doesn't even say to what country!"

Border guards maintained that they did not know the grounds for the
deportation, continued Brukh, since their computers stated only that he was
barred, but not for how long or what reason. After several hours under
guard in a cramped, filthy room in the airport, Brukh was deported in the
early hours of 16 October, he told Forum 18. At his own request, he flew to
Vienna and on to Riga.

Border guards suggested to Brukh that the authorities in Minsk District
(Minsk Region) - where he was registered - would know the reason for his
removal. At Minsk District Migration and Citizenship Department on 18
October, however, officials insisted to Sergei Shavtsov, Brukh's lawyer,
that they were not responsible and knew nothing about the deportation, he
told Forum 18 the same day.

Bishop Brukh lived in Minsk Region between 2005 and late 2007, working
with a company he part-founded importing items such as children's
playground facilities and wheelchairs. While the state authorities took
issue with the business, Brukh and Shavtsov insisted to Forum 18 that he
has not violated the law in this area.

Instead, Brukh believes his continued active involvement in the 500-strong
Jesus Christ Church, which he founded in 1991, was noted by KGB secret
police surveillance. Also a participant in the late 2006 high-profile
hunger strike in defence of New Life Church's Minsk worship building (see
F18News 20 October 2006
), Brukh gave media
interviews on that campaign, including to US media, he told Forum 18. "The
KGB probably saw that."

Minsk Regional KGB's Information and Public Relations Department directed
Forum 18 to the KGB headquarters in central Minsk on 20 October. Answering
its Confidential Line, a spokesman told Forum 18 that the reasons for
Brukh's deportation would not yet have been released, but provided contact
details for the headquarters' Information and Public Relations Department.
On querying whether this would have information if it had not yet been
released, the spokesman remarked only: "The person who is supposed to know
knows. I'm not supposed to know." At the headquarters' Information and
Public Relations Department, a spokesman apologised that while he
understood Forum 18 was not in Belarus, he was not prepared to discuss
anything with journalists not accredited with the Belarusian Foreign
Ministry.

Bishop Brukh believes that the late 2006 introduction of the joint
Belarus-Russian Federation migration card made it easier to track his
movements, and that he was also noted by the religious affairs authorities.
He recalled that at the time of the hunger strike in defence of New Life
Church's building - a former cow barn - a local pastor was asked by Alla
Ryabitseva, Minsk city's top religious affairs official, "what Brukh was
doing in the barn." Ryabitseva has been hostile towards New Life Church
(see F18News 7 February 2008
).

Ryabitseva told Forum 18 on 20 October that she knew nothing about Brukh's
deportation. It bore no relation to her as he was not in the city of Minsk,
she insisted. "I haven't met with Brukh since he left for the USA."

In a 28 March 2000 letter viewed by Forum 18, Vladimir Lameko of the then
State Committee for Religious and Ethnic Affairs rejected the Full Gospel
Church's request to invite then Pastor Brukh to perform religious work,
explaining that Jesus Christ Church "already has highly qualified religious
personnel, so there is no need to invite a foreign citizen to engage in
religious activity in that community." On challenging this decision in
court, Brukh won the right to stay a further six months in Belarus, he told
Forum 18, but moved to the USA in 2001 to pursue theological study.

Religious communities believe the KGB secret police keeps a close eye on
their activity. In late 2004, for example, KGB officers arrived at a
Baptist church in Ratomka (Minsk Region) during a service at which two US
citizens were filling in for the local pastor, fining them for having
invitations to Belarus from an unrelated organisation. The source for this
information suggested to Forum 18 that an informer must have been planted
in the congregation for this to happen, since the local pastor had
announced in advance when the two Americans would preach, and the KGB
officers immediately picked out both them and the piano player for
questioning - who that day was a Belarusian but is usually an American (see
F18News 12 May 2005 ).

Similarly, after Polish citizen Fr Antoni Kochko led a single Mass without
state permission in Minsk's SS Simeon and Helen Catholic Church in
September 2006, a man and woman in plain clothes present in the
congregation approached him in the sacristy and informed him that he had
violated Belarusian law covering religious activity. Responding to a weblog
entry of the incident, a Minsk Catholic commented that the pair "are always
sitting in our church. You can't fail to spot them - I even bumped into one
of them at a demonstration once" (see F18News 3 October 2006
).

Orthodox believers have also complained of KGB intimidation at worship
services (see F18News 18 September 2008
). (END)

For a personal commentary by Antoni Bokun, Pastor of a Pentecostal Church
in Minsk, on Belarusian citizens' struggle to reclaim their history as a
land of religious freedom, see F18News 22 May 2008
.

For more background information see Forum 18's Belarus religious freedom
survey at .

Full reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Belarus can
be found at
.

A survey of the religious freedom decline in the eastern part of the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) area is at
.

A printer-friendly map of Belarus is available at
.
(END)




 
 

 
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