|
ANN Bulletin Adventist News
Network Seventh-day Adventist Church World
Headquarters
| Adventists in Russia Track Progress of Military
Service Law |
February 12, 2002
Moscow, Russia .... [ESD Staff/Rebecca
Scoggins/ANN]
|
An estimated 1,400
young Seventh-day Adventists in Russia are watching the progress of
a draft law that would provide alternatives to required military
service. Many of the 1,400 men, all in their late teens or early
20s, could be called up for one or two years of compulsory army duty
as early as this spring.
Valery Ivanov, communication
director for Seventh-day Adventists in Euro-Asia, says that Russian
military and government officials reached agreement on all key
points in the draft late last week. A. Pochinok, Russia's Minister
of Labor and Social Development, is scheduled to present a version
of the proposed alternative service law to the Russian Cabinet of
Ministers on February 14. If cabinet members are satisfied with the
current draft, it will be sent to the Russian Duma, or parliament,
for further consideration.
"For many years, Adventists in
Russia have urged the adoption of an alternative service plan," says
Ivanov. "Many of our young men have strong convictions against
taking another life. Most of them feel strongly that they cannot
bear arms or be trained to kill. But they are not opposed to serving
in a way that strengthens peace."
For Adventists, who
reserve the seventh day, or Sabbath, as a holy time for worship, the
Saturday activities often associated with military service are an
additional burden.
The proposed law would allow pacifists to
fill out a special application for alternative service. Acceptance
in the program would not be automatic, Pochinok said last week. "The
committee needs to speak with each young man and determine that his
conviction is genuine," he said.
After acceptance for
alternative service, young men would be required to perform varied
assignments in their home cities or regions. Pochinok warns that the
tasks "can't be called easy." Possible work sites include fire
departments, disaster sites, nursing homes, and orphanages. Workers
would receive a salary and would be allowed to continue their
education during non-work hours.
Normally all healthy
Russian males are required to perform two years of military duty
beginning at age 18. Full-time university and college students may
have their service deferred, and usually they are required to serve
only one year after finishing their courses. Men accepted for
alternative assignments would probably be required to serve longer
than the typical two years.
"This law could be the next step toward shaping
democracy in our country," says Ivanov. "Citizens with true
convictions against killing could serve according to their
consciences. And we expect Adventist believers would have an easier
time keeping Sabbath under the proposed plan. In the army, their day
of worship is rarely respected." |
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ANN Staff: Ray Dabrowski, director; Bettina Krause, news
director; Ansel Oliver, editorial assistant. Copyright
Adventist News Network 2001. |