http://www.bosnewslife.com/preview/2728-uzbekistan-secret-police-detains-protestant

Uzbekistan Secret Police Detains Protestant Pastor

Thursday, 25 January 2007
By BosNewsLife News Center in Budapest

TASHKENT/BUDAPEST (BosNewsLife)-- Uzbekistan's secret police detained 
Protestant Pastor Dmitry Shestakov at his church in the city of Andijan 
last weekend, after a regional prosecutor had accused him of "committing 
high treason," a Christian news agency reported Thursday, January 25.

Compass Direct News said the 37-year-old pastor is apparently accused of 
"incitement of national, racial and religious enmity," under the Soviet 
republic's penal code.

If convicted, he could face up to five years in prison. Authorities 
began to "harass him" in May 2006, apparently in reaction to the 
conversion to Christianity of some ethnic Uzbeks, Compass Direct News added.

“Uzbeks started coming to faith [in his church], and this was not good 
news to the authorities,” one Tashkent who knows him was quoted as saying.

Shestakov, his wife and three daughters apparently went into hiding in 
June 2006 after regional prosecutor Kamolitdin Zulfiev accused the 
pastor of committing treason. Police reportedly also raided the pastor’s 
house, temporarily detaining Shestakov and confiscating videos of his 
sermons.

NATIONAL STATE SECURITY

Although the pastor was ordered to list all of his church members, he 
refused to do so. "It was clear that the National State Security were 
going to find something to charge me with and remove me from my position 
as a Christian pastor," Shestakov said in an interview.

Authorities also searched Shestakov’s Andijan church, confiscating 
religious CDs and videos and pressuring members of the congregation to 
testify against their pastor, Compass Direct News said.

Human rights groups say Uzbekistan's legal infrastructure violate 
internationally recognized norms of religious freedom. Local prosecutors 
frequently file "falsified charges" in order to obtain arrest orders 
against religious leaders perceived to be a threat against "national 
security," local Christians and outside observers say.

Shestakov and his family initially fled Andijan, located in eastern 
Uzbekistan ’s Ferghana Valley , to avoid arrest. But after several 
months they returned to a nearby city, continuing covert contact with 
their Andijan congregation.

NOT LEAVING COUNTRY

"Yes, I do get depressed [and] it is hard to be joyful," Shestakov 
commented in an interview, as "I am no hero." After pastoring for 13 
years, Sheshtakov said he did not believe it would be right to leave his 
country and abandon the church that he started four years ago in 
Andijan. Seeking asylum abroad was not an option for him, he said, 
although he wants to clear his name in his homeland.

"I am called by God to be a pastor to the people in Uzbekistan ," the 
pastor said. "I am on a pilgrimage without a home, a church or status – 
but with God," Compass Direct News quoted him as saying.

Church observers say religious restrictions increased in Andijan after 
government troops reportedly killed at least hundreds of protestors in a 
May 2005 uprising, causing an international outcry.

The Uzbek government has reportedly said that the Akramia group at the 
center of the uprising is an Islamic terrorist organization, while 
Akramia leaders insist it is a peaceful religious group. Christian 
pastors in the area are also accused of being "extremists" on what 
rights watchers describe as "far-fetched" court charges.

In November US Ambassador for Religious Freedom John Hanford announced 
the addition of Uzbekistan to Washington’s annual list of Countries of 
Particular Concern for its "abysmal record on religious freedom and 
other human rights," urging the Uzbek government to "rethink its 
policies and undertake the necessary reforms." (With reports from the 
region).

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