This is why it is important to have balanced and correct beliefs.

http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1239266--underground-sect-some-of-whom-had-never-seen-daylight-found-in-russia

Islamist sect charged with abuse after members found living underground for
nearly a decade
Published on Thursday August 09, 2012
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**
NIKOLAY ALEXANDROV/APMembers of an underground sect in Russia's Volga River
province of Tatarstan province stand at the gate of a house outside the
provincial capital, Kazan, on Wednesday, Aug. 8, 2012. The reclusive sect
that literally went underground to stop contact with the outside world kept
27 children in dark and unheated cells, many of them for more than a decade.
**
The Associated Press

MOSCOW — A self-proclaimed prophet had a vision from God: He would build an
Islamic caliphate under the earth.

The digging began about a decade ago and 70 followers soon moved into an
eight-level subterranean honeycomb of cramped cells with no light, heat or
ventilation.

Children were born. They, too, lived in the cold underground cells for many
years — until authorities raided the compound last week and freed the 27
sons and daughters of the sect.

Ages 1 to 17, the children rarely saw the light of day and had never left
the property, attended school or been seen by a doctor, officials said
Wednesday. Their parents — sect members who call themselves “muammin,” from
the Arabic for “believers” — were charged with child abuse.

The sect’s 83-year-old founder, Faizrakhman Satarov, who declared himself a
prophet in contradiction to the principles of Islam, was charged with
negligence, said Irina Petrova, deputy prosecutor in the provincial capital
of Kazan.

The children were discovered when police searched the sect grounds as part
of an investigation into the recent killing of a top Tatarstan Muslim
cleric, an attack local officials blame on radical Islamist groups that
have mushroomed in the oil-rich, Volga River province of Tatarstan.

Satarov ordered his followers to live in cells they dug under a three-story
brick house topped by a small minaret with a tin crescent moon. Only a few
sect members were allowed to leave the premises to work as traders at a
local market, Russian media reported.

The children were examined at hospitals and will temporarily live in an
orphanage, pediatrician Tatyana Moroz said. “They looked nourished but
dirty, so we had to wash them,” she said in televised remarks.

Their parents expressed concern about the children’s medical treatment.

Doctors “can do anything to them,” Fana Sayanova, a woman wearing a long
white dress with her face veiled, told local television.

The decrepit house on a 700-square-meter (7,530-square-foot) plot of land
was built illegally and will be demolished, Tatarstan police said.

“They will come with bulldozers and guns, but they will have to demolish
this house over our dead bodies!” sect member Gumer Ganiyev said on the
Vesti television channel. The ailing Satarov appointed Ganiyev as his
deputy prophet, according to local media.

Satarov had followers in several other cities in Tatarstan and other Volga
River provinces, local media reported.

In a 2008 interview with the Komsomolskaya Pravda daily, Satarov said that
he fell out with other clerics and authorities in the Communist era, when
he said the KGB sent him to Muslim nations with stories about religious
freedom in the officially atheist Soviet Union. Government-approved
Orthodox Christian, Muslim and Jewish clerics routinely travelled abroad on
Soviet publicity trips.

“That’s how I became Satan’s servant, a traitor,” the white-bearded and
turbaned man was quoted as saying. “When I understood that, I repented and
started preaching.”

Muslim leaders in Tatarstan said Satarov’s views contradict Islamic
doctrine.

“Islam postulates that there are no other prophets after Mohammad,”
Kazan-based theologian Rais Suleimanov told the Gazeta.ru online
publication Tuesday.

Police raided Satarov’s house last Friday as part of an investigation into
the killing of Valiulla Yakupov, Tatarstan’s deputy chief mufti, who was
gunned down in mid-July as he left his house in Kazan. Minutes later, chief
mufti Ildus Faizov was wounded in the legs when a bomb blast ripped through
his car in Kazan.

Both clerics were known as critics of radical Islamist groups that advocate
a strict and puritanical version of Islam known as Salafism.

Prosecutors have named two suspects in Yakupov’s killing who remain at
large and arrested five others in the case.

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