ECHR Again Sided With Jehovah's Witnesses. Consideration of Complaints Filed Before Russia's Withdrawal From Court Jurisdiction Completed
Moscow, Kurgan Region, Trans-Baikal Territory, Orenburg RegionOn March 26, 2026, the European Court of Human Rights published judgments on complaints filed by 30 individual believers and four legal entities.
These are the last complaints against the Russian Federation filed by Jehovah's Witnesses with the European Court before September 16, 2022, the moment of Russia's withdrawal from the jurisdiction of the ECHR. They were combined into five cases. Considering the case of Kutsenko v. Russia, the ECHR found that in February 2020, a resident of Chita, Vadim Kutsenko, was mistreated by law enforcement officers. The State failed to protect the physical well-being of someone in vulnerable detention. The authorities refused to conduct a full-fledged criminal investigation into the use of violence against the believer. It is noteworthy that in 2021, the charges of "organizing the activities of an extremist organization" were dropped from him, but three and a half years later the criminal prosecution resumed.
In the case of Suvorov and Others v. Russia, the European Court found that the authorities persecuted people for their religious beliefs, subjected them to illegal detention, and conducted unjustified searches. In this case, the Russian court saw "extremism" in the fact that believers gathered for a friendly evening in a café, where they held competitions, played jokes, sang songs and danced.
Such violations by the Russian law enforcement system are described in the decision in the case of Tchaikovskiy and Others v. Russia. It concerned mass raids in Moscow in November 2020 and the subsequent criminal prosecution of local Jehovah's Witnesses. One of the applicants, Yuriy Chernyshev, sentenced to 6 years in a penal colony, recalls: "About 12 people broke into us with a search. It was early in the morning. They began to knock out the front door and at the same time several people, breaking the double-glazed window, began to enter the apartment through the broken window. We live on the fourth floor. For this, we used equipment with a lifting cradle." In a similar way, law enforcement officers consistently treat Jehovah's Witnesses in different regions of Russia.
As the ECHR found, the authorities did not prove the applicants' participation in any socially dangerous extremist activity, and the interference in their religious life "was based on an excessively broad interpretation of the legislation on extremism." According to the court's decision, Russia is obliged to pay compensation to the applicants, which totals 183,750 euros. One of the applicants on whom a decision on monetary compensation was made is Aleksandr Lubin. He passed away shortly after his conviction, without waiting for justice to be restored.











