Christians in the Central Asian nation of Uzbekistan suggest a recent  government crackdown against the church there is reminiscent of the old  Stalinist tactics of Soviet era communism. 
        Pastor Dmitry Shestakov was sentenced on March 9th  to four years internal exile for illegal religious activity including the  distribution of materials “promoting religious extremism.” Shestakov is an  evangelist who has openly shared his faith with non-believers. He is affiliated  with the legally registered Full   Gospel Church,  yet government prosecutors charged at his trial that he was not an authorized  leader of an official church. The state news agency called him an “imposter”.  
          Evidence against Shestakov—videos, CD’s and printed materials  were reportedly passed on to professors at the Adijan State   University for  evaluation. Shestakov’s attorney says that was a violation of Uzbek law because  only the federal Committee on Religious Affairs has the authority to evaluate  religious materials. The court ignored evidence presented in Shestakov’s  defense proving his affiliation with the Full Gospel   Church. The Uzbekistan  court has yet to decide which Soviet era penal colony will house Shestakov for  the next four years. The photo accompanying this Blog is of Shestakov’s 6-year  old daughter, Vera (Faith in Russian) praying for her daddy in his car.
        Uzbek Christians say the Shestakov case is only one example  of a more restrictive, repressive response against them from a paranoid,  undemocratic regime.
        18 pastors were detained last January 15th when  police burst into an informal prayer gathering near Nukus. The pastors were  apparently forced to sign statements admitting the gathering was a Christian  one. The Uzbek government does not allow unregistered religious meetings.
        Last August, Uzbek Christians suffered arrests,  imprisonment, torture and deportation at the hands of police.  27 believers were arrested during a raid on  their unregistered church gathering in Termez. Six of the Christians were  reportedly beaten severely by police. 
        In September, Pastor Sergey Khripunov and his family were  stripped of their Uzbek citizenship because of their unregistered church  activities. They were deported to Moscow.
        Also, the government reportedly shut down at least a dozen  foreign religious charities in 2006 deporting hundreds of Christian workers. 
        Todd Nettleton, spokesman for The Voice of the Martyrs told  us in a recent interview, “The Uzbek government lumps evangelical Christians in  the same boat with radical Muslims. They consider all of them to be  anti-government, they consider all them to be undermining the authority of the  government and so, whether you are a radical Muslim or an evangelical  Christian, they want to stop you.” 
        Sound reminiscent of the Soviet communist approach? Joseph  Stalin would be proud.
        Uzbekistan  story Links:
        http://www.persecution.com/news/index.cfm?action=fullstory&newsID=504
        http://forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=928