Tuesday, December 31, 2013

More attacks by Boko Haram

International Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that twelve Christians were brutally murdered by suspected Boko Haram militants in northern Nigeria over the weekend. According to reports, these Christians were killed in two attacks on separate Christian villages in Nigeria's Muslim majority state of Borno.

The first attack took place on Saturday, December 28, in the Christian village of Tashan-Alede where eight people attending a wedding celebration were killed when militants connected with Boko Haram opened fire on the Christians gathered. According to theChristian Broadcasting Network, "One attack took place at a pre-wedding bachelor party. Suspected fighters from Boko Haram opened fire on the group, killing eight people."

On December 29, the day after the attack on Tashan-Alede, suspected militants killed four more Christians when they attacked the neighboring village of Kwajffa. Security officials have confirmed the attacks took place but have yet to confirm casualty figures.

In an interview with The Associated Press, schoolteacher Yohana Jafa noted that the attacks on minority Christian villages in the predominantly Muslim region came hours after the leader of the Boko Haram terrorist network, Abubakar Shekau, "clearly stated that his war is against Christians."

Boko Haram is an Islamic terrorist network group currently fighting the Nigerian government for control of northern Nigeria. Boko Haram desires to establish a separate Islamic state in Nigeria's northern states where it can enact an ultra conservative interpretation of Sharia law. Since beginning its armed insurgency in 2009, Boko Haram has killed over thousands of people in Nigeria often targeting Christians for some of the most brutal acts of violence. In early 2012, Boko Haram leaders demanded all Christians to leave northern Nigeria so that the group could begin establishing its purely Islamic society. Since then, Boko Haram has perpetrated church bombings, drive-by shootings and Christian pogroms across northern Nigeria.

ICC's Regional Manager for Africa, William Stark, said, "Christians living in Nigeria's northern regions continue to be the target of some of Boko Haram's most brutal attacks. These attacks are meant to terrorize the Christian community that continues to live in northern Nigeria. The United States has designated Boko Haram a Foreign Terrorist Organization, which allows the U.S. to seize Boko Haram's assets under U.S. jurisdiction and to take more direct action against the terrorist network. Unfortunately, actions like this have yet to be taken. This would help stem the flow of arms and funds the group receives from sources outside Nigeria's borders. The consistency of Boko Haram's attacks on Christians and government institutions has shown that Nigeria's government is struggling to deal with the violence that has dominated its northern states since 2009.The international community must take decisive action.
For interviews, contact William Stark, Regional Manager for Africa: 
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington-DC based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Christmas bombings in Baghdad

International Christian Concern (ICC) is deeply troubled by the two bombings that targeted Christians in the Iraqi capital on Christmas day. Two separate blasts occurred in the Dora neighborhood of Baghdad. Altogether, at least 37 people were killed and some 59 others were wounded, the Interior Ministry said.
 

The largest blast targeted worshipers as they were leaving the service at St. John Catholic Church. As churchgoers were exiting the Christmas day service, a parked car exploded, BBCreports. The blast killed at least 26 people and wounded 38 more, a police officer told AAP.

Shortly before the explosion outside St. John's, a bomb ripped through an outdoor market in the nearby Christian section of Athorien, killing 11 people and wounding 21. A medical officer, also speaking on the condition of anonymity confirmed the casualty figures, according to an APreport.

The attacks came despite efforts by security forces to protect Christmas celebrations throughout Iraq. Brig. Gen. Saad Maan, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said that thousands of security personnel will take part in the plan, which will start on Christmas Eve and will include "securing all churches, monasteries, public parks, tourist resorts and markets, as well as residential areas where celebrations will be held and where citizens are expected to go out visiting each other", he told Mawtani.

Baghdad's Dora neighborhood was once known as "The Vatican of Iraq" and was home to more than 30,000 Christian families. Today there are just an estimated 2,000 Christians living in the area. Following the removal of Saddam Hussein the area became a hotbed for Islamic extremists and a stronghold for al Qaeda militants. The neighborhoods churches repeatedly were attacked and church leaders were kidnapped. The violence had surged again in just the past few weeks with corpses found dumped, indicating that the death squads that have caused so much damage are again back at work, Colin Freeman wrote in the Telegraph.

No one has claimed responsibility for today's attacks, but signs point towards al Qaeda or a similar Islamic extremist group. As Freeman recounts in the Telegraph"In 2010, al-Qaeda gunmen attacked an evening Mass at Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad, taking more than 100 hostages. By the time the security forces stormed the building two hours later, 58 were dead."

The Christmas day bombings have pushed the number of civilian deaths in December to 441 and the total for the year above 8000, according to U.N. estimates.

Todd Daniels, ICC Regional Manager for the Middle East, said, "We are extremely troubled by the attacks on Christians as they mark the birth of Jesus, the Prince of Peace. This is just the latest in a long series of attacks that are driving Christians out of the land where they have lived for nearly 2000 years. It is imperative that the government and security forces take all steps possible to protect its civilians, including Christians, and provide for their continued existence in the region. We call on Christians around the world to remember their brothers and sisters in Iraq and to stand with them in prayer." 

For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East: RM-ME@persecution.org

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington-DC based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Expansion of North Korea's prison system

 It began with a media frenzy. Six months into Kim Jong-un's new reign over North Korea, the internet was filled with images and video of the smiling new leader waving to his beloved people. ABC news reported the "youthful supreme leader" was "attempting to forge a new image for himself and his country" by allowing women to wear pants and endorsing banned foods like French fries and pizza. A few months before, on Jan. 1, the newly minted leader of the world's most militant regime had publicly called for an end to the almost fifty year old confrontation between the two Koreas.

The façade was not to last. Even as we at International Christian Concern pointed outthe lack of any significant reforms to the regime's despotic policy towards religious minorities, the Kim Jong-un government was pumping more resources into expanding its horrific system of political prison camps, known as "Kwan-li-so." On Dec. 4, Amnesty International released new satellite images of the camps where generations of families, many of them Christian, are sent to starve or work themselves to death. The images revealed that rather than close or curtail the growth of the nightmare camps, Kim Jong-un was working on their expansion.   

All of this news though paled in comparison with the sheer brutality of the report ICC received last month on Nov. 11. According to a South Korean news source, at least 80 people were publicly executed in seven cities across North Korea on the same day. Their so-called "crimes" included watching South Korean movies, distributing pornography, and the "possession of Bibles." At least one of those Bible owners was tied to a post in the center of a sports stadium, a bag placed over their head, as they were torn apart by machine gun fire until their body was "hard to identify afterwards."   Families of the "criminals" were reportedly sent to the Kwan-li-so.

The executions were widely viewed as a move by the only 30-year-old leader to consolidate his grip on the populace. One source intimately familiar with the reclusive nation told ICC, "It just shows that Kim Jong-un is still trying to consolidate power and I think this is an indication of his failure to do so." As to why Christians were among those executed, the source said, "I am sure all those executed knew information from the outside and [among them] were certainly Christians. The DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of North Korea) has always considered Christians their greatest threat."

Any doubts remaining that Kim Jong-un was determined to secure his position at all costs died last week when the state controlled media announced that Kim's uncle, Jang Song Thaek, had been publicly removed from his position of authority and executed only days later. Jang was widely believed to be untouchable as the second most powerful figure in the country. Within a week of his execution, massive purges were erasing all references to Jang Song Thaek from North Korea's history books.

What all of this repression means for Kenneth Bae, a U.S. missionary who recently became the longest serving American prisoner in North Korea since the end of the Korean War, is anyone's guess. Kenneth is serving out a 15-year sentence of hard labor after being arrested in late 2012 for allegedly trying to overthrow the hyper-paranoid State. Kenneth, who has been described as a "devout Christian," was providing legal tours into North Korea while conducting quiet humanitarian work. Of course, in a nation where as many as 70,000 Christians are interned in the modern day equivalent of concentration camps for simply being Christians, Kenneth's sentence is tragically unsurprising.

Yet even as a deeper darkness appears to be settling over North Korea, there is some cause for hope. For the first time ever, and thanks in part to Christian advocates, the United Nations has launched a "Commission of Inquiry" into the atrocities being committed in the country. Its ultimate goal: to conclude if North Korea has committed "crimes against humanity" (a foregone conclusion for many). Chilling testimony given to the commission this year by defectors and survivors of the Kwan-li-so has already raised the profile of North Korean crimes substantially, giving hope that significant international pressure on the regime will soon be brought to bear.

Most notable, and perhaps even more significant in this author's opinion, is that after 65 years of total war directed at Christianity, an unbelievably determined remnant of believers still free inside the country continues to hold fast to their faith. In late October, new and exceedingly rare footage of underground believers quietly praying and singing in their homes was released by a Christian NGO. The footage, which may have cost some believers the ultimate price to obtain, is emphatic proof that no amount of totalitarianism has been able to completely extinguish the fire that faith ignites. If China's current unprecedented revival is any indication, the final death knell of the modern world's most evil regime (whenever it comes) may herald in an era of spiritual renewal led by a core of Christian leaders whose faith survived insurmountable odds. One day, Pyongyang may even earn again its old title, "Jerusalem of the East." 
 
For interviews, contact Ryan Morgan, Regional Manager for Southeast Asia: 

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington, D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Church closings sweep across Indonesia

 I watched as the pastor began to cry, tears welling up in his eyes as he described the scene to me. It was May 18th, 2012, and there were hundreds upon hundreds of screaming fanatics hurling rocks, dirt, and even bags filled with urine at his congregation as the police stood by and watched. Signs hanging near his church read "Jesus is a dog" and "Kill the Christians." The rioters claimed the pastor had never obtained the proper permits to operate his church, and the local government agreed, sealing the building and prohibiting the pastor and his congregation from ever returning.

My interview with Pastor Palti Panjaitan of the GKI Yasmin church was eye opening. For years the world, including the United States, has lauded Indonesia as the prime example of a tolerant, Muslim democracy. The largest Muslim-majority nation in the world, Indonesia embraces a welcoming political philosophy known as "Pancasila," composed of five "inseparable" principles, including social justice. The vicious attack Pastor Palti described hardly seemed synonymous with Indonesia's pristine reputation. After further investigation, it proved to merely be the tip of the iceberg.

Across Indonesia in 2012, International Christian Concern (ICC) found that at least 50 churches like Pastor Palti's were forcibly shut down, almost always under pressure from radical Islamic groups. These groups usually claim the church lacks the proper permits to operate, based on a 2006 zoning law that requires "places of worship" to obtain signatures of approval from surrounding neighbors. The law is well-known to be a charade, as it is almost never applied to anyone except religious minorities. It is also well-known among Indonesia's church leaders that obtaining a permit can be nearly impossible and usually requires hefty bribery of local officials. In 2012, I was told of one very large church which had to spend more than a million U.S. dollars to obtain a permit that is, officially at least, supposed to be free.

By early 2013, the closure of churches had begun to garner international attention. In March, photos and video of a Batak Protestant Christian church being demolished by the government was picked up by international news agencies. The video showed radical Muslims cheering and applauding as the building was torn apart, all while members of the congregation stood by and watched helplessly. The next month, ICC took the issue to Congress and the State Department. Soon after, reports of churches being sealed shut by local governments plummeted to almost zero.

That is, until three weeks ago. Now, seemingly out of nowhere, a new rash of church closings appears to be sweeping across Indonesia.   On Dec. 1, radicals belonging to the Islamic Defenders Front stormed a church service in North Sumatra, creating such havoc that the church members had to be escorted home by riot police. Future services were indefinitely suspended.

On Dec. 6, the Jakarta Globe reported that two new churches had been sealed shut, one in West Java and one in South Sulawesi. The church in South Sulawesi was subsequently demolished by local authorities, leaving hundreds of Christians in the area without a single church to attend.

Then on Monday, ICC received word that at least two more churches, located near Jakarta, had been forced to stop services by radicals last week, bringing the total number of closed churches to five in just three weeks.

The reason behind this month's rash of church closures, especially after seven months of relative quiet, is not exactly clear. It may be that the coming Christmas holiday has ignited always simmering anti-Christian sentiment among radical groups. In 2000, 16 were killed by bomb attacks on churches over the Christmas holiday.

On Monday, Indonesia's national police chief, General Sutarman, announced that 87,000 police personnel would be mobilized to "prevent disruptions to Christmas and New Year's Eve celebrations." The majority of the police forces will be tasked with guarding churches and "other places of worship."

Yesterday, AsiaNews, a Catholic news service, also reported that an Islamic council in the province of Aceh had recently ordered Muslims not to participate in Christmas celebrations, calling the activities "forbidden."Aceh is the only province in Indonesia fully governed by Sharia law and was the site of several church closures last year.

The one thing that is clear is the need for an international spotlight to shine once again on what can only be defined as religious discrimination protected by badly misused legislation. Recent history has shown that without the glare of this spotlight, Indonesia's federal government has little, if any, incentive to protect its Christian population from mistreatment.  
For interviews, contact Ryan Morgan, Regional Manager for Southeast Asia: 

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington, D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Egyptian Church is the Target for Islamic Radicals

An increasingly vulnerable Egyptian Church continues to serve as a convenient target for pro-Morsi supporters to vent their rage as tensions in the country show no sign of abating following the Muslim Brotherhood's removal from power in July.  Islamist crowds coalesce weekly in front of one of the major churches in the Cairo suburbs following Friday prayers, leaving behind scrawls of anti-Christian graffiti, vandalism, and threats of violence.
For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East: 

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington, D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Could you survive in an Iranian prison for 444 days?

 International Christian Concern (ICC) continues to call for the release of American-Iranian Saeed Abedini. December 12th marks 444 days since Saeed was taken to an Iranian prison, simply because of his Christian faith. Representatives Chris Smith (R-NJ) and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) co-chaired a joint subcommittee hearing on Iran's continued persecution of Pastor Saeed. The dangers that Saeed faces in the brutal prison are real and it is crucial that the American people and the American government remain fully engaged to see this father and husband brought home to his family.

Representative Smith said in his opening remarks, "Saeed's case must be front and center in the next series of diplomatic talks with Iran. Time is running out. Naghmeh, Jacob, and Rebekka need their husband and father home. Now!"

It was 444 days ago that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard took Saeed from house arrest, where he had been detained since July 28, 2012. On September 26th, he was transferred to Tehran's Evin prison. As his wife, Naghmeh, stated in her testimony to the hearing, "To learn he had been put in Evin Prison brought flashbacks of family members and friends who had been executed, raped, and tortured in Evin." On January 27th, after a sham trial, Saeed was sentenced to eight years in prison. What was the reason for his imprisonment? He was arrested for "peaceful gatherings of Christians, which the regime views as an act of war," Naghmeh told the hearing today.

Since his arrest, Pastor Saeed's case has received significant attention from the national and international media, by members of Congress, and even, on occasion, from Secretary of State John Kerry and President Obama. While Pastor Saeed has been in prison in Iran, the level of diplomatic engagement between the two countries is at its highest point since the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979, when 52 Americans were also held for 444 days.

Despite face-to-face negotiations with Iran at the highest level, Pastor Saeed remains in prison. Representative Mark Meadows (R-NC) voiced a view held by many of the members of the panel, "If they cannot release individuals and others held without due process then how are we to trust them on greater issues?" The view was echoed by Representative Smith, "How can we trust a signature on a piece of paper when they treat an American citizen in such a brutal way?"

The lack of trust and transparency was a theme addressed both by members of the committee and by the witnesses who testified. Representative Ros-Lehtinen said, "We must judge the Iranian regime, not on words, but on actions." She continued, "On the campaign trail they promised reforms on human rights, but these have not happened."Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett, vice-chair of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, testified, "The number of Christians and Bahais imprisoned during his [President Rouhani] short tenure has increased, and there has been a crackdown on Protestant Christians." Daniel Calingaert, Executive Vice President of Freedom House, testified that there have already been a reported 668 executions in Iran this year, and the rate increased after President Rouhani's took office in August.

It is imperative that the United States government continue to press for the release of Saeed. There can be no more "missed opportunities" such as the latest rounds of negotiations in Geneva where Naghmeh said, "I felt abandoned as an American citizen that Saeed's release was not a pre-condition for negotiations." Representative Smith addressed these talks saying, "Every conversation with Iran should have begun with Saeed Abedini and should have ended with Saeed Abedini."

Todd Daniels, ICC Regional Manager for the Middle East, said, "We urge the United States government to redouble its efforts to secure the immediate and unconditional release of American citizen Saeed Abedini. There should be no further diplomatic negotiations with Iran while they continue to hold American citizens hostage, specifically a man imprisoned for exercising his most fundamental right. Saeed's life is in imminent danger and 444 days is far too long for this family to be separated, simply because of his beliefs. We urge the Iranian government - and President Hassan Rouhanı - to free this father and husband." 
For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East: RM-ME@persecution.org

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington-DC based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

The strange case of the Nanle County Christian Church

On Saturday, Nov. 16, approximately a dozen Chinese police officers walked into the Nanle County Christian Church in Henan Province, a government sanctioned "Three-Self" church, and "tied up" the church's pastor, Zhang Shaojie. Authorities then spirited him away to a secret location. Today, almost three weeks later, no one is quite sure where exactly Pastor Shaojie is, or if he's even still alive.

The pastor's arrest sparked an immediate outcry from family and church members, who proceeded to gather in front of the local police station in protest. According to ChinaAid, a religious rights group based in Texas, authorities reportedly threatened the group of protestors, striking some members and "causing Pastor Zhang's [elderly] parents [to be hospitalized] for high blood pressure." Two of the pastor's sisters, present at the protest, were also taken into custody.  

The next day, Sunday morning, the situation went from bad to worse for the Nanle Country Christian Church. Police stationed themselves outside of the church building and arrested anyone who tried to go inside. All told, the number of arrested church members, including Pastor Shaojie, is currently believed to be 23. 

Pastor Shaojie's arrest came a mere day after the country's Communist Party's Central Committee promised an end to the more than half-century-old program of "re-education through labor." The program, which allows any citizen to be sentenced to up to four years of imprisonment by police without trial, has been used for decades to lock up everyone from drug addicts to political "dissidents." Among those imprisoned "dissidents" have been countless thousands of Chinese Christians who choose to worship "illegally" in unregistered, and therefore unsanctioned, house churches.  

Yet Pastor Shaojie's arrest is all the more alarming precisely because he is not a pastor of an unregistered house church. Pastor Shaojie's church is an official "Three-Self" church, registered with the government and therefore, at least theoretically, operating legally. In fact, Pastor Shaojie is himself the chairman of the local Three-Self Committee. His arrest, and the arrest of so many of his church members, may be new cause for concern for the millions of Chinese Christians who believe they are worshipping safely in a government sanctioned Three-Self church.

Worse still are the threats that have fallen on some of Pastor Shaojie's family members. On Nov. 19, ChinaAid reported that Pastor Zhang Shaojie's daughter, Zhang Huixin, was forced to flee into hiding with her husband and ten-month-old daughter. Huixin had received more than 10 threats in two days, including one in which a caller threatened to "wipe out her entire family" if she didn't stop relaying information on the arrest of her father to the outside world.

While international observers tend to agree that overall conditions for religious minorities are gradually improving across China, Pastor Zhang Shaojie's arrest is a serious indicator that major obstacles remain. This is even acknowledged by the United States in the most recent report by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a government watchdog. The 2013 report states that, "The Chinese government continues to perpetrate particularly severe violations of the freedom of thought, conscience, and religion or belief. Religious groups and individuals considered to threaten national security or social harmony...are illegal and face severe restrictions, harassment, detention, imprisonment and other abuses."

Perhaps the only real ray of hope in what appears to be an otherwise dismal situation for Pastor Zhang Shaojie is the small amount of international attention his case is receiving. Human rights lawyers from across China have rushed to take on his case, though so far they have met only with obstruction by the local government and have been refused access to most of the arrested church members. Still, as long as the glare of the international spotlight continues to shine on the case of Pastor Shaojie and the Nanle County Christian Church, there is hope that the authorities in Henan Province, as well as the officials at the highest levels of the Chinese Communist Party, will be held accountable for their actions. 

For interviews, contact Ryan Morgan, Regional Manager for Southeast Asia: 

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington, D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Friday, December 6, 2013

South Sulawesi Christian Church destroyed by government authorities

International Christian Concern (ICC) has just learned that district authorities in Sulawesi, Indonesia began demolishing the South Sulawesi Christian Church on Wednesday after the local government issued an injunction ordering the members to completely halt all worship services late last week. The demolition of the protestant church is being called an "act of barbarism" and an example of "zero tolerance" towards religious minorities by Indonesian human rights observers. By Friday morning, authorities were still in the process of dismantling the church.

According to regional news sources, church members responded to the demolition with "a mixture of dismay and disappointment," calling the authorities' decision "nonsense." The church is reportedly the only place of worship for hundreds of Christians in the Pangkep District of South Sulawesi.

Problems for the church reportedly began in 2011 after the church was forced to apply for a permit to repair its leaking roof. Local authorities responded by demanding the church obtain 60 signatures from Muslim residents giving the church permission to repair the roof.  Arruan Lenden, a leader of the South Sulawesi Christian Church, said,"We have no problem with the residents, but they only gave us a verbal permit. They refused to sign because they did not want to bear the consequences later."

On Friday, Arraun told the Jakarta Globe that the building had become a church in 1989 and was not required to obtain a permit because "it was made of wood." In 2006, the Indonesian Religious Affairs Ministry issued a "Joint Decree on Houses of Worship" revising building permit requirements for religious structures. The law has been widely abused by radical Islamic groups, including the Islamic Defenders Front, who cite the decree as justification for conducting violent protests outside places of worship. Local governments often respond by sealing the places of worship shut.

In 2012, ICC recorded 50 such forced church closures across Indonesia. To date, the law has never reportedly been used as justification to halt construction, seal off, or forcibly demolition a Sunni Islam place of worship.   

Ryan Morgan, International Christian Concern's Regional Manager for Southeast Asia, said, "We had been extremely hopeful that this kind of flagrant disregard for the rights of religious minorities was on the decline in Indonesia in 2013, at least as far as the Christian community was concerned. This demolition, however, coming alongside reports that two other churches have recently been sealed, is quickly dashing those hopes. We call on President Yudhoyono to speak out immediately and strongly against what is clearly a discriminatory abuse of the 2006 Revised Joint Ministerial Decree on construction of houses of worship."

For interviews, contact Ryan Morgan, Regional Manager for Southeast Asia: 
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington-DC based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Persecution in Sri Lanka

After a recent visit to Sri Lanka, Navi Phillay, the United Nation's Human Rights Chief, stated that she was disturbed by the "surge in the incitement of hatred and violence against religious minorities... and the lack of swift action against the perpetrators." Making up only 7.5% of Sri Lanka's multi-religious population, Christians are increasingly the targets of religiously motivated violence on the small island nation whose government seems inclined to ignore their suffering.

Violence against Christians Increases


With a population made up of 70% Buddhist, 12% Hindu, 10% Muslim and 7.5% Christian, Sri Lanka has often touted itself as a religiously diverse and tolerant country. The government of Sri Lanka often highlights the fact that in many cities, churches, mosques and temples are able to sit peacefully side by side. Unfortunately, this view of Sri Lanka may be a thing of the past.

In the year 2012, there were 52 violent incidents recorded against Christians, marking a 100% increase from year 2011. That number continued to rise in 2013. According to the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka (NCEASL), 65 violent incidents against Christians have already been recorded and the number is likely to increase during the months of November and December.

October 2013 saw seven violent incidents against Christians recorded by the NCEASL. These incidents include the forced closure of churches, the homes of Christian pastors being vandalized, arson, and Christian pastors being threatened with violence and/or beaten because of their faith activities.

Attacks are often perpetrated by hardline Sinhalese Buddhist monks who are seeking to preserve the Buddhist cultural tradition of Sri Lanka, using violence to ensure that tradition's preservation. Mobs that attack Christians and other religious minorities are often led by Sinhalese Buddhist monks amidst cries that Christianity is foreign to Sri Lanka and has no place in its society.

In a recent BBC article, one Christian pastor from Sri Lanka stepped forward to recount an attack on his church. "Two Buddhist monks rushed into the church," the pastor told the  BBC. "Twenty-five to 30 villagers followed. They yelled insults at us, calling us traitors for preaching the word of God. They shouted 'this is a Buddhist nation, a Buddhist village'.

"They threatened to kill us; they said they would burn my house down when they came back." The pastor went on to tell the BBC that the monks and their followers beat him in front of his congregation and that he was told to discontinue worshiping in that location or face more severe punishment.

A Government Unaware and Unwilling

Among the most disturbing matters this rise in religious intolerance has exposed is the lack of action taken by the government of Sri Lanka to protect Christians. Most attacks on Christians occur with impunity. According to the NCEASL, most incidents of religiously motivated violence against Christians have yet to lead to arrests or other punitive actions even though the attacks occurred openly with eye witness, video and photographic evidence readily available. In some extreme cases, local government officials become active participants in violent incidents, especially when an attack leads to the forced closure of a church.

A recent quote from Udaya Gammanppila, a provincial minister for a Buddhist nationalist party, given to the BBC was telling of the Sri Lankan government's awareness of the plight of Christians in Sri Lanka. When confronted by a BBC reporter with the story of a pastor attacked by Buddhist monks, Mr. Gammanppila said the government was "unaware" of such attacks. He also went on to say that he was unaware of the 65 other incidents recorded by the NCEASL and that the reports were likely "made up" by the Christians.

Unfortunately, it looks like the plight of Christians in Sri Lanka will continue to get worse. With Buddhist hardliners gaining more support among the country's Buddhist population, compounded with the Sri Lankan government's unwillingness  to protect Christians, the number of attacks will likely increase in 2014 in both number and intensity. 
For interviews, contact William Stark, Regional Manager for Africa: 

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington, D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church.  For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Rebels recapture Syrian city of Maaloula

The ancient Christian village of Maaloula has again become the site of fierce fighting in Syria. A coalition of rebel groups, including the extremist al-Nusra Front, which has ties to al-Qaeda, attacked forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. After intense fighting over the weekend, they have taken control of the village. Twelve nuns and three other women from the Greek Orthodox monastery of Mar Takla were taken by rebel forces from Maaloula towards the border town of Yabroud, an International Christian Concern (ICC) contact in the region reported on Tuesday. 

The monastery, which had previously housed 40 nuns and orphans, and at least one other church, were severely damaged in the fighting. After the rebels drove out the forces of the Assad regime, they attacked a number of Christian buildings and three young Catholic men were also killed by the rebel fighters, Asia News reported.

Church leaders have expressed serious concerns for the safety of the women who were taken. Greek Orthodox Patriarch John Yazigi called for the release of the Maaloula nuns. "We appeal to the seed of conscience that God planted in all humans, including the kidnappers, to release our sisters safely," Yazigi said in a statement issued Tuesday.

While twelve of the nuns were taken from the monastery, many of the other nuns remain trapped inside.

"We call upon the international community and world governments to help secure the release the nuns of Mar Takla Convent and the orphans who are being held since yesterday," Yazigi added.

Fighting Returns to Ancient Maaloula

In September, Maaloula had been the scene of heavy fighting, but was ultimately held by the government forces, until Friday, November 29. "Rebel forces, including the jihadist Al-Nusra Front, swept into Maaloula from the surrounding hills after rolling explosive-laden tires onto regime troops below," The Daily Star reported.

The government has been making advances in the strategic Qalamoun region in an attempt to contain the rebel forces. Maaloula sits on the edge of that region, near a highway that provides a transit route from the capital Damascus to the city of Homs. The region is likely to remain a hotspot in the coming weeks.

Before fighting came to the village in September, it had a population of nearly 5,000. Located in the mountains northeast of Damascus, Maaloula is a symbol of Christianity's ancient presence in Syria and one of the last remaining places speaking Aramaic, the language Jesus spoke.

Many of the residents had already fled to Damascus, a resident  told Fox News. He was afraid "rebels would punish them for supporting Assad and because they are Christians."

Gregory III, the Melkite Greek Catholic Church Patriarch of Antioch and all the East, honored the three men killed by rebels after they had taken control of the city. Speaking of the dangers to Christians who remain in hostile areas in Syria he said, "We are determined to remain in this blessed land even at the cost of martyrdom and martyrdom of blood."

"This [martyrdom] has already happened to some of our faithful, such as the three men from Maalula, Michael Taalab, Antonios Taalab and Sarkis Zakhem. They are true martyrs killed for refusing to renounce their faith," the Patriarch said in a statement to Fides.

Most of the Christian community had left, and the majority of those who had stayed in Maaloula were Muslims, with the exception of those who had sought refuge at the monastery.

The reason why some of the women were taken from the monastery remains unclear. There are fears that the women were kidnapped and taken to be abused or held hostage, but others have indicated that they were removed for protection.

Mario Zenari, a spokesman for the Vatican, said the rebels "forced the sisters to evacuate and to follow them towards Yabroud. At this moment we cannot say if this is a kidnapping or an evacuation," he told Reuters by telephone from Damascus.

Based on  abuses women have suffered throughout the conflict there are serious reasons for concern. Also, a number of church leaders, including both a Greek Orthodox and a Syriac Orthodox archbishop, have been kidnapped and in some cases killed.

Late Monday night, Pelagia Sayaf, the Mother Superior from Mar Takla and one of those taken, was able to contact the head of a nearby convent and said all twelve women who were taken were"fine and safe," AP reported.

For those still in the monastery sources for Albawaba said, "The rebels were still in the convent with the nuns and that the shelling and sniping by government troops had prevented their attempts to evacuate them," leaving a number of nuns and others trapped inside the monastery. 

Islamic Extremists Taking "Syria out of Syria"

Many Syrian Christians have either attempted to remain neutral in the conflict or they have supported the government, fearing the Islamic state many of the rebel groups want to create in Syria.

"They are trying to take the Syria out of Syria," a 23-year-old whose family fled Syria after his father was killed by rebels told ICC. "These are games to destroy the people and culture. It is a war, but they are attacking us as Christians," he continued.

Another Christian refugee described how the rebel groups in his village were "very angry towards the cross and the church." After they had removed Assad's forces, they kidnapped and beheaded Christians, he told ICC. "My daughters could never go outside. We were scared and stayed at home." They were only able to escape out of Syria with an escort from government troops.

The growing strength of radical Islamic groups has most Syrians, including Christians, afraid of what would happen if Assad were to fall. While early on some of the opposition was fighting for greater rights and freedoms, the movement was hijacked by those pushing an extremist agenda.

Mousab Alhamadee is a Syrian journalist and activist who just recently decided to leave Syria. During the spring of 2013 he traveled to the United States for a few months and in June returned to continue working in the rebellion against the Assad dictatorship. "I knew the moment I arrived back in Syria, however, that things had changed - even though I had been gone just three months," he wrote in McClatchy.

"The rising prominence of religious radicals augured poorly for a diverse and open society, and the prospects for women were deteriorating. Radicals even had invaded schools, forcing their type of dress and ways of thinking on teachers and pupils alike. No way would we allow our daughter to grow up in such an unhealthy environment," Alhamadee continued.

Despite his desire to stay and work for a better Syria, the rise of al-Qaeda and other extremists groups forced him to choose exile. Many other Syrians have awoken to the same reality about many of the groups fighting against Assad.

War Crimes from Both Sides

Throughout the conflict, the rebel groups have repeatedly targeted civilians, and in many cases, specifically Christians and churches. Human Rights Watch has released a detailed reportchronicling what amounts to war crimes during their October offensive in the Christian village of Sadad. They have called for the international community to become more directly engaged in finding a solution to the war in Syria and seeking justice for the victims of so many atrocities.

The United Nations Human Rights office has implicated Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the commission of war crimes during the 33-month-old conflict. Navi Pillay, the United Nations high commissioner for human rights said an investigation of "human rights offenses in Syria has produced "massive evidence" of the commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity," the New York Times reported.

The twelve nuns taken from the Mar Takla monastery are the latest victims of the horrific violence that has engulfed Syria. ICC echoes the call of many church leaders for their release.

While neither side in the conflict appears to offer a bright future, we pray for an end to the violence that has already destroyed so much in Syria, and a negotiated political solution that will restore order to Syria.  
For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East: 

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