ANN Bulletin
Adventist News Network
Seventh-day Adventist Church World Headquarters
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Persecution in Turkmenistan Condemned by Adventist Representative |
March 12, 2002
Washington, D.C., USA .... [Viola Hughes/ANN]
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Jonathan Gallagher, associate
director for the public affairs and religious liberty department of the Adventist
Church, speaking on Capitol Hill March 7.
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Proposals
by the United States Commission on International Freedom to address the ongoing
persecution of religious minorities in Turkmenistan brought reaction from
the Seventh-day Adventist Church's department of Public Affairs and Religious
Liberty.
Addressing panelists and attendees at a Capitol Hill meeting on March 7,
Jonathan Gallagher, associate director in the PARL department, said: "We are
appalled at the gross violations of religious liberty in Turkmenistan. The
church supports attempts to make the persecuting regime change course and
respect the fundamental freedoms they claim to endorse. When churches are
bulldozed and Christians imprisoned, tortured and deported, we must speak
out against such atrocities."
The rule of Turkmenistan's president Nyazov, former Communist supremo, has
brought widespread condemnation. Nina Shea, commissioner for USCIRF, announced
the commission's proposals.
"The commission remains gravely concerned about the situation in Turkmenistan,
where conditions for religious freedom are extremely bad," she said. "Most
groups, no matter what their religious orientation, are now banned and actively
suppressed."
The proposals called for immediate suspension of all non-humanitarian assistance
to the government of Turkmenistan and the cancellation of all state visits
between the two countries. Additionally, the commission called for Turkmenistan's
human rights record to be raised at the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights.
Adventists have been targets of state-sponsored religious persecution in
Turkmenistan, with the destruction in November 1999 of the only Adventist
church building in the country, the arrest and detention of the pastor and
members, fines and beatings, and the expulsion of an Adventist woman from
her apartment for allegedly holding religious services there.
"We must send a clear message to the president of Turkmenistan that his actions
in violating fundamental human rights are intolerable," says Gallagher. "We
are asking all those who wish to support our protest at the treatment of
religious minorities in Turkmenistan to write to both the Turkmen government
and to elected leaders here in the US." Details about the letter-writing campaign
are available at http://un.adventist.org.
Copyright © 2002 Adventist News Network . |
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ANN Staff: Ray Dabrowski, director;
Bettina Krause, news director;
Ansel Oliver, editorial assistant.
Copyright Adventist News Network 2001.
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