Cour Europe'enne des Droits de l'Homme
The European Court of Human Rights
Strasbourg, France.
Friday, October 02, 2009 |
Europe rights court rules Russia illegally interfered with practice of Scientology
Andrew Morgan at 2:58 PM ET
[A] religious group without legal personality cannot possess or exercise the rights associated with legal-entity status, such as the rights to own or rent property, to maintain bank accounts, to hire employees, and to ensure judicial protection of the community, its members and its assets. The Court, however, has consistently maintained the view that these rights are essential for exercising the right to manifest one's religion.
The ECHR found that Russia's interference did not "serve a legitimate aim" and was not "necessary in a democratic society" because the applicants did not intend to engage in any illegal activities, or pursue "any aims other than worship, teaching, practice and observance of their beliefs."
Scientology, founded by American science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard in 1954, has come under increasing scrutiny in Europe in recent years. Last year, German authorities dropped an investigation [JURIST report] into Scientology aimed at determining if it was "incompatible with the Constitution." In September 2008, a Scientology center in France faced criminal charges [JURIST report] in connection with allegations of fraud and the illegal practice of pharmacy. In September 2007, Belgian prosecutor Jean-Claude Van Espen said Scientology should be classified as a criminal organization [JURIST report] after completing a 10-year investigation into the church's activities
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