Friday, October 06, 2006

European Court Upholds Salvation Army Claim Against Russia

According to a report yesterday by the Associated Press, the European Court of Human Rights has ruled that the refusal by Russia to register the Moscow branch of the Salvation Army after a change in Russian law in 1997 violates the group's rights to freedom of religion and association under the European Convention on Human Rights. The Moscow Justice Department refused to register the group because its founders were foreign nationals. A Moscow district court then ruled on appeal that the Salvation Army branch should be denied registration as a religious body because it was a "paramilitary organization" whose members wore uniforms and served in an "army". The European Court rejected the paramilitary characterization, and held that there was no reason for Russia to treat foreigners different than Russian nationals as to their exercise of religious freedom.