RUSSIA RELIGION NEWS


Two more Jehovah's Witnesses convicted

COURT IN MURMANSK OBLAST FINES TWO JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES FOR CONDUCTING ACTIVITY OF EXTREMIST ORGANIZATION. THEY DID NOT ADMIT GUILT

by Igor Cherniuk

7 x 7 Murmansk Oblast, 24 January 2020

 

The Polyarny district court of Murmansk oblast found two Jehovah's Witnesses guilty of continuing the activity of a forbidden extremist organization and fined them, a 7 x 7 correspondent reported on 24 January.

 

According to the version of the prosecution, two believers—Roman Markin and Viktor Trofimov—carried out in the Aleksandrovsk garrison activity of the Administrative Center of Jehovah's Witnesses in Russia, which was banned and liquidated by a decision of the Russian Supreme Court in 2017 as an extremist organization. The local Polyarny religious organization of Jehovah's Witnesses also was liquidated.

 

"Trofimov and Markin, while in the city of Polyarny of Murmansk oblast, acting deliberately and in concert with a group of persons by previous agreement, undertook measures of conspiracy, having informed members of a liquidated organization beforehand about the time and place of conducting illegal measures, they organized and conducted group religious liturgical actions, using the internet network by means of conference communication . . . , including the study of the teaching of Jehovah's Witnesses under the guidance of religious literature and prayer to the God Jehovah, and they organized the collection of financial resources under the guise of contributions for carrying out the activity of a liquidated religious organization," the court's decision states.

 

The prosecutor demanded the imprisonment of the believers for six years. The court decided to fine the defendants 600 and 650 thousand rubles, but reduced the fine of Markin to 300 thousand rubles and of Trofimov to 350 thousand rubles, because the defendants had been in custody and under house arrest more than six months. The sentence has not taken legal effect.

 

The investigation began in the spring of 2019. The suspects were under house arrest for several months.

 

Neither Roman Markin nor Viktor Trofimov admitted guilt, and they intend to appeal the court's decision. During the judicial debates they explained that they are followers of the religious confession of Jehovah's Witnesses, were members of the organization until its liquidation, and now engage in the study of the Bible along with like-minded persons, because they still adhere to the religious views of Jehovah's Witnesses.

 

"I did not commit any crime. During the announcement [of the sentence] they talked all the time about extremist activity. But they never identified a single extremist action," Jehovah's Witness Roman Markin told a 7 x 7 correspondent.

 

In Markin's opinion, the criminal case against him was opened without a basis, since he did not "incite hostility" and did not perform a single extremist action, and meetings of believers, in his opinion, cannot be forbidden, since the Russian constitution guarantees freedom of religious confession.

 

According to the defendants, during the investigation a representative of the Russian Orthodox Church and a religious studies scholar studied a video recording of believers and defined their actions as divine worship and not as a session of a public organization.

 

In the trial, the believers declared that neither before nor after the liquidation of the local organization did the Jehovah's Witnesses in the closed district of Aleksandrovsk encroach upon the constitutional system of Russia and they did not cause harm to citizens.

 

This is not the first case when Jehovah's Witnesses in Murmansk oblast have been subjected to prosecution as extremists. On 20 January 2020, in Murmansk, the Jehovah's Witness Vitaly Omelchenko was arrested. When he and his wife one evening exited the lobby, four persons in civilian clothing asked him to go to the police department. Vitaly's spouse returned home alone. (tr. by PDS, posted 24 January 2020)


Background article:
Anti-Jehovah's Witnesses action in Russian Arctic region
December 30, 2019

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