Kyrgyzstan's Parliament has passed without discussion the first reading of a restrictive draft Religion Law, which may, according to some, pass its final reading on 21 October.
However, others have said that the second and final reading will be later. It is unclear what is in the current text, as officials refuse to release the latest version.
Deputy Zainidin Kurmanov said that the latest text is on the parliamentary website, but other deputies state that they do not know what is in the draft Law.
Kurmanov revealed that the draft Law includes: a ban on unregistered religious activity; a threshold of 200 adult citizens to gain state registration; a ban on "proselytism"; a definition of a "sect"; and a ban on the free distribution of literature.
Kurmanov claimed he did not understand objections as "only criminals should be afraid of law and order."
Protestant, Jehovah's Witness and Baha'i religious minorities have all expressed concern at the secrecy surrounding the Law, the lack of public consultation, and the restrictions thought to be in the first reading text.
A joint Venice Commission/OSCE legal review of a July text of the Law is also highly critical of it.
Officials claim to be organising a roundtable, but religious communities say they have not been invited to it.
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(Source: RI)