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At the Height of the COVID-19 Pandemic, Law Enforcers Launched Raids in the Moscow Region. A 33-year-old Believer Has Been Detained for the Second Day
Moscow RegionIn the morning of 2 June 2020, at least five houses of local believers were searched in the village of Vlasikha near Moscow. Two women and one man were taken away for interrogation by the security services. Sergey Oganyan, the father of a minor child, was detained.
At 6:20 a.m., about 10 law enforcement officers broke into the apartment of Sergey Oganyan, who lives with his wife and minor daughter. The law enforcers issued a decree to initiate a criminal case against Sergey on charges of organizing and participating in the activities of an extremist organization, after which they began a search. It was supervised by investigators of the Main Investigation Directorate of the Investigative Committee of Russia in the Moscow Region Yevgeny Dymchenko and Denis Popov.
The spouses reminded the investigators that a raid in the conditions of a pandemic could pose a special threat to health. Law enforcers ignored the warning, despite the fact that, according to the Ministry of Health of the Moscow region on June 3, Odintsovo district, where the Oganyan family lives, is one of the leaders in the number of detected cases of coronavirus in the Moscow region.
Mobile phones, other electronic devices, bank cards, personal records and greeting cards were seized from Oganyan. Sergey was taken to the Mytishchinskoye branch of the Russian Interior Ministry's department and previously detained for 48 hours.
On the same day two women believers were searched in Vlasikha. They were taken for interrogation to a branch of one of the law enforcement agencies and released a few hours after the events began. Details are being clarified.
This is the second wave of persecution of believers in the Moscow region after the liquidation and prohibition of all religious organizations of Jehovah's Witnesses in Russia in 2017. In September 2019, a criminal case for the faith was initiated against six Chekhov residents. Notably, in 2016 and 2017, local courts acquitted two residents of Moscow Region who were accused of a similar "crime" - religious gatherings and conversations about the Bible with others