In a complete vindication of the Scientology religion and
Scientologists, presiding judge rules that entire case was a “serious and
irremediable breach of the right to a fair trial.”
The Church of Scientology of Belgium and Scientologists everywhere
salute today’s decision by the 69th Trial Chamber of the Brussels Criminal
Court, which upheld the rights of Scientologists to practice their religion and
unequivocally rejected the prosecution’s false allegations and fatally flawed
and biased case.
“Justice prevailed again for Scientologists today,” said Rev. Eric
Roux, Church spokesman in Belgium. “This is a very good day for justice and
human rights in Belgium, and a relief for Belgian Scientologists unduly
prosecuted for two decades. The Court put an end to 18 years of prejudice
against the Church of Scientology and its members and strongly stated that
Scientology should not be treated differently than other religions. With this
decision, the Belgian judge expressed that any discrimination by the
prosecutor’s office based on religious grounds cannot be tolerated in a state
that abides by the rule of law.”
The Court categorically and emphatically dismissed all charges against
two Churches of Scientology and eleven individual defendants while upholding
the fundamental human rights of the Church and its members. The watershed
decision rejects the biased charges brought by the prosecutor against the
Church and its officials, and brings 18 years of religious discrimination
fueled by investigative actions taken in bad faith by the prosecutor in this
case to a complete halt. The decision makes it clear that the evidence does not
support the prosecutor’s biased view of the case against the religion, the
Church and its adherents. Justice and the rule of law have prevailed in
Belgium.
Presiding judge Yves Regiment noted that Belgian authorities had
unfairly hounded the Church of Scientology for years stating: “The entire
proceedings are declared inadmissible for a serious and irremediable breach of
the right to a fair trial.”
The Trial Court reached the same unequivocal conclusion as the Highest
Courts in Italy, the United Kingdom and Australia as well as judicial and
administrative bodies in many countries: that Scientology should not be treated
differently than other religions, and that basing prosecution on religious
beliefs is a violation of human rights. This is the underlying principle that
drives the decision and which was ignored by the prosecution.
The Church of Scientology, founded in 1954, has millions of members in
more than 180 countries. Its first Church in Belgium was established in 1974.
The Church sponsors numerous social betterment campaigns, including its drug
prevention campaign, its initiative for the betterment of the moral values
beneficial to the individual and his family, its action to end psychiatric
abuses, its human rights education program and its literacy campaigns.
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