Hindu homes razed in Kazakhstan
Hindu homes razed in Kazakhstan
Eleven houses owned by members of ISCKON have been demolished by the local police, the organisation has alleged.

New York: Eleven houses owned by members of ISCKON, a religious minority group in Kazakhstan, have been demolished by the local police, leaving the families homeless in freezing temperatures and winter snow, the organisation has alleged.

Incidentally, the bulldozing began even while a state special commission – appointed to investigate allegations of religious harassment against Hindus in Kazakhstan – had promised that no government action would be taken until the commission made its findings public.

The dispute began a few months ago when ISCKON members stared developing a cultural centre on a piece of land owned by them on the outskirts of Almaty.

The governor of the region, however, wanted the court to evict the members from the site, according to reports appearing in the ISCKON website.

At a recent meeting held in Almaty and chaired by A M Muhkashov, the deputy director of the Kazakh government religion committee, the ISKCON delegation was clearly told that Hindus do not have a place in Kazakhstan.

The demolition on Tuesday has been labelled as land grabbing by the local government by many human rights organisations. The incident has already evoked outrage from the Hindu community across the world, according to an ISCKON press release.

"National Hindu organisations from the UK, United States, Canada, Australia, and other countries condemn this injustice and call upon the Kazakhstan government to immediately stop the persecution of Hindus," Secretary General of the Hindu Forum of Britain, Ramesh Kallidai says.

"I have no words to describe what I have seen," head of the Almaty Helsinki Committee, Ninel Fokina says.

Almaty Helsinki Committee is an international human rights organisation, monitoring the police action. “They have no right to put people out of their homes in winter,” Fokina adds.

According to the US State Department's 2005 International Religious Freedom report, the Kazakhstan government maintained a list of 73 minority religious groups, which are protected under the constitution.

According to the same report, several of these groups, including ISKCON, reported being vilified as a threat to society and national security by media agencies including government-controlled agencies in Kazakhstan.

"Today the homes of innocent people of faith have been destroyed, and women and children put out into the snow, at the hands of a government that claims to value religious freedom," spokesperson for ISKCON, North America, Anuttama Dasa says.

"Such aggression against innocent people, coupled with blatant governmental hypocrisy should not be tolerated by the international community," Dasa adds.

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