New York Times Reports on Russia’s Supreme Court Ban of Jehovah’s Witnesses

New York Times Moscow correspondent Andrew Higgins reports on today’s action by the Russian Supreme Court labeling the Jehovah’s Witnesses an Extremist Group:

Jehovah’s Witnesses banned in Russia
The Supreme Court of Russia has banned Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Russia’s Supreme Court on Thursday declared Jehovah’s Witnesses, a Christian denomination that rejects violence, an extremist organization, banning the group from operating on Russian territory and putting its more than 170,000 Russian worshipers in the same category as Islamic State militants.

“The ruling, which confirmed an order last month by the Justice Ministry that the denomination be “liquidated”—essentially eliminated or disbanded—had been widely expected. Russian courts rarely challenge government decisions, no matter what the evidence.

“Viktor Zhenkov, a lawyer for the denomination, said Jehovah’s Witnesses would appeal the ruling. He said it had focused on the activities of the organization’s so-called administrative center, a complex of offices outside St. Petersburg, but also branded all of its nearly 400 regional branches as extremist.

“’We consider this decision an act of political repression that is impermissible in contemporary Russia,’ Mr. Zhenkov said in a telephone interview. ’We will, of course, appeal.’

“An initial appeal will be made to the Supreme Court’s appellate division, Mr. Zhenkov said, and if that fails, Jehovah’s Witnesses will take the case to the European Court of Human Rights, in Strasbourg, France.”

The complete article is available here.

Read more on religious freedom here.

Russia extremist group Jehovah’s Witnesses
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