Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Kyrgyzstan President Signs Controversial New Religion Law
Kyrgyzstan President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Monday signed a repressive new Religion Law according to reports by the Press Association and by Forum 18. The law streamlines government control over religion by banning private religious schools and providing for teaching of religion in public schools. In order to register as a religious group, organizations will need 200 members, instead of the current 10. It bans children being involved in religious organizations. It also prohibits distribution of various kinds of religious material as well as aggressive proselytizing. Human rights groups say that the new law violates international human rights standards. Members of the US Congressional Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe wrote Bakiyev last week objecting to the new law. However, according to the Press Association report: "Kyrgyzstan's main denominations, the Spiritual Administration of Muslims and the Russian Orthodox Church, have backed the changes, which are seen as a government attempt to dispel concern about the influence of foreign evangelical Christians and fear of radical Islamic groups."