In a 6-1 Chamber Judgment in Taganrog LRO and Others v. Russia, (ECHR, June 7, 2022), the European Court of Human Rights held that Russia's forced dissolution of Jehovah’s Witnesses religious organizations, banning of Jehovah's Witness religious literature and international website on charges of extremism, banning distribution of their religious magazines, criminal prosecution of individual Jehovah’s Witnesses, and confiscation of their property violate protections for freedom of religion, expression and assembly found in Articles 9, 10 and 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights, as well as other protections. The Court said in part:
152. The first ground for declaring the Taganrog LRO to be an “extremist” organisation was the charge that its texts stoked religious hatred by casting “traditional” Christian denominations in a negative light, undermining respect for their religious figures, urging people to leave those religions, and proclaiming the superiority of the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses....
153. The Court reiterates that preference for one’s own religion, the perception of it as unique and the only true one or as a “superior explanation of the universe” is a cornerstone of almost any religious system, as is the assessment of the other faiths as “false”, “wrong” or “not conducive to salvation”.... In the absence of expressions that seek to incite or justify violence or hatred based on religious intolerance, any religious entity or individual believers have the right to proclaim and defend their doctrine as the true and superior one and to engage in religious disputes and criticism seeking to prove the truth of one’s own and the falsity of others’ dogmas or beliefs....
154. ... [I]n a pluralist and democratic society, those who exercise their right to freedom of religion ... cannot reasonably expect to be shielded from exposure to ideas that may offend, shock or disturb. They must tolerate and accept the denial by others of their religious beliefs and even the propagation by others of doctrines hostile to their faith.... Religious people may be genuinely offended by claims that others’ religion is superior to theirs. However, just because a remark may be perceived as offensive or insulting by particular individuals or groups does not mean that it constitutes “hate speech”....
The Court also issued a press release summarizing the lengthy opinion.