BREAKING NEWS!!!--Decision expected tomorrow in Moscow trial to ban JWs

by loveis 4 Replies latest jw friends

  • loveis
    loveis

    www.jw-media.org

    The beginning of the end??

  • sf
    sf

    For Immediate Release
    March 25, 2004
    Printable Version

    Decision expected in trial to ban Jehovah's Witnesses in Moscow

    MOSCOW—A decision is expected tomorrow in the drawn-out civil trial to ban Jehovah's Witnesses in Moscow. After almost six years of civil proceedings, in which some 40 witnesses testified and the findings of some 30 experts were examined, Judge Vera K. Dubinskaya will hear final arguments and then is expected to rule on the civil complaint brought by the Prosecutor's Office of the Northern Administrative Circuit of Moscow.

    The Prosecutor's Office has stated that banning Jehovah's Witnesses in Moscow would be the first step to banning them throughout Russia. On April 13, 1999, members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe warned: "The case is a cause of concern for other religious groups who also expect to be banned if the Jehovah's Witnesses were to lose."

    The prosecution makes essentially the same case it made during the trial to liquidate the Moscow Community of Jehovah's Witnesses that ended on February 23, 2001. On that date, Judge Yelena Prokhorycheva dismissed all charges filed by the Moscow Prosecutor's Office against Jehovah's Witnesses. The judge's decision stated:

    The Court came to the conclusion that there is no basis whatsoever for the liquidation and banning of the religious community of Jehovah's Witnesses in Moscow, since it has not been established that this community in Moscow violates the Constitution of the Russian Federation or laws of the Russian Federation.

    Unbowed, the City Prosecutor's Office appealed that decision on May 30, 2001. A retrial was ordered. Some legal experts who have followed these events expect that in the current trial, the court will find that nothing has changed regarding the religious activity of the more than 11,000 Jehovah's Witnesses in Moscow. If that happens, the court may again determine that there are no facts to support the charges.

    In June 2003 the European Court of Human Rights submitted questions to the Russian government on the basis of a December 2001 application by Jehovah's Witnesses of Moscow regarding the prosecution. Their application complained of excessive delay in the judicial proceedings and its adverse effect on their right to freedom of religion.

    There are now over 133,000 active Witnesses in Russia, and last year 282,350 persons in the country attended their annual commemoration of the death of Christ.

    Local English-speaking contact: Christian Presber
    Telephone: +7 (911) 944-4087 (within Russia 8 (911) 944-4087)

    Local Russian-speaking contact Vasily Kalin,
    Telephone: +7 (916) 680-1779 (within Russia 8 (916) 680-1779)

    Address of the Golovinsky Intermunicipal District Court:
    ul. Zoi i Aleksandra Kosmodem'yanskikh, 31/2, Moscow

  • sf
    sf

    Banning Jehovah's Witnesses will only help their activity, says expert

    MOSCOW—Professor Nikolai Vitalyevich Shaburov, one of the final experts to testify in the trial to ban Jehovah's Witnesses in Moscow, stated that the ban sought by the prosecutor in order to hinder Jehovah's Witnesses would actually help them in their preaching activity.

  • donkey
    donkey

    lame...

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    I think the Watchtower in big trouble and may have to relinquish some control over Russian JWs which may be very very good.

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