N E W S B R E A K
Adventist President Calls on Church to "Remember and Pray for the Persecuted" in Turkmenistan
BY JONATHAN GALLAGHER
eneral Conference president Jan Paulsen calls on church members to remember and pray for the persecuted, especially those in Turkmenistan.
"At this time when thoughts of peace and goodwill are often spoken of, we need to remember those who are denied the freedom to worship and to practice their beliefs," says Paulsen. "We are deeply concerned over the situation in Turkmenistan. Such reports are distressing and our communications with the authorities have not brought any response.
"The issuing of this statement highlights our grave concern and our wish for a rapid resolution to the ongoing tragedy. I appeal to our international church family to continue to pray for the persecuted around
the world, and most specifically for our fellow-believers in Turkmenistan."
Paulsen's appeal comes in conjunction with the Dec. 19 release of a statement by the GC Public Affairs and Religious Liberty Department that protested the ongoing religious oppression in Turkmenistan "in the strongest possible terms."
The statement cites religious freedom and human rights violations that include "arbitrary detention and imprisonment, exile and deportation, the destruction of houses of worship, the confiscation of
personal property, the imposition of punitive fines, the loss of employment, [and] mental and physical abuse."
According to Felix Corley of Keston News Service, an organization dedicated to providing information regarding religion in the former USSR, "Turkmenistan has the most repressive policy towards religion of all the former Soviet republics. Only Muslim communities loyal to the officially-sanctioned Muslim Board and some parishes of the Russian Orthodox Church have been allowed to register.
"All other faiths are treated as illegal. Believers have been harassed and fined for their religious activity. Some have been imprisoned, including the Baptist Shageldy Atakov, serving a four year sentence, while places of worship have been destroyed, such as the Adventist church in Ashgabad, bulldozed in November 1999."
The church statement also raises specific instances of persecution by Turkmen police who have targeted
believers from the Baptist, Pentecostal, and Adventist churches, arresting, fining and imprisoning them.
"The above-referenced actions represent violations of fundamental human rights that are in direct conflict with the established international norms, and are yet further evidence of the Turkmenistan state's hostility
to religious minorities," says the statement.
"Repeated incidents of apparent state-sponsored or condoned vilification of protestant Christians
in the national media, the use of physical intimidation and judicial sanctions against minority believers, and the escalating attacks by state
agencies against innocent church members, are an affront to the basic principles of human dignity."
The statement calls on the Turkmenistan government "to cease all oppressive actions against religious minorities, to free all prisoners of conscience, and to fully conform to the international standards of religious freedom."
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Jonathan Gallagher is the General Conference liaison to the United Nations.
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