Armenia registers Jehovah’s Witnesses after years of debate

Armenia registers Jehovah’s Witnesses after years of debate
By AVET DEMOURIAN

AP Worldstream
Oct 13, 2004

Authorities in Armenia registered the Jehovah’s Witnesses on Wednesday,
allowing the religious group to operate in the Caucasus Mountain
nation after years of debate and denial.

The Jehovah’s Witnesses first appeared in Armenia in 1988, after
a devastating earthquake in what was then still a Soviet republic,
but had been unable to register after the nation became independent
in the 1991 Soviet collapse.

Legalizing the Jehovah’s Witnesses group was one of the main conditions
set out by the Council of Europe when the continent’s leading human
rights organization granted Armenia membership two years ago.

Deputy Justice Minister Tigran Mukuchian told The Associated Press a
major obstacle to registration had been members’ refusal to serve in
the military, which in the past led to arrests and prison sentences. A
law institution alternative service has removed that obstacle, he said.

The leader of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Armenia, Grach Heshishian,
expressed surprise at the Justice Ministry’s decision, while the
dominant Armenian Apostolic Church denounced it, calling the group
“anti-Christian.”

An Armenian Apostolic Church statement accused the Jehovah’s Witnesses
and other unspecified organizations of having missions that involve
“hunting for human souls, destroying families and creating a split
in society.”

Seeking to soothe church opposition to the registration, Justice
Ministry spokesman said the authorities would watch closely to make
sure the Jehovah’s Witnesses were acting legally, adding that “the
sect will have to respect the laws and rights of Armenian citizens.”

Official figures put the number of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Armenia
at more than 4,000; one of the requirements for registration of a
religious group is that it have at least 200 followers in the nation.

The Jehovah’s Witnesses have faced pressure from authorities in Russia.
Courts in Moscow outlawed the group’s activities in the capital
earlier this year under a law allowing bans on religious groups that
are considered to be inciting hatred or intolerant behavior.