Radio Free China
News from China & asia with a focus on human rights and religious liberty.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
- Edmund Burke

Saturday, October 11, 2003

China arrests legal adviser to imprisoned underground church leader. AP via New Jersey Online Oct 10 2003 3:34PM ET [Moreover - China news]
5:03:56 AM    

Up to 30 Taliban Escape from Afghan Jail (Reuters). Reuters - Up to 30 Taliban prisoners have escaped from jail in the volatile city of Kandahar, presenting yet another security headache in troubled southern Afghanistan, security personnel said on Saturday. [Yahoo! News - World]
5:02:29 AM    

SEVEN DEAD, 18 MISSING IN CHINESE MINES - RFA

Seven miners have died in the central Chinese province of Hunan from gas poisoning, while a further 18 miners were missing in Henan province after a mine-shaft flooded, RFA's Mandarin and Cantonese services report.


5:00:14 AM    

China's leaders discuss reform. President Hu Jintao and senior Communists open a four-day meeting in Beijing to plan political reforms. [BBC News | World | Asia-Pacific | UK Edition]
4:56:47 AM    

Nepal attack ends rebel truce. Maoist rebels kill at least three policemen in an attack, ending a nine-day ceasefire declared for a Hindu festival. [BBC News | South Asia | World Edition]
4:55:26 AM    

Isaiah 41:10. Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand. [English Standard Version Bible Daily Verse]
4:55:11 AM    

China Sets Space Flight for Next Week. BEIJING — After a decade of preparation and months of speculation, China made a concrete commitment Friday to human space travel, announcing plans to launch a manned capsule into orbit next week. [Los Angeles Times World News]
4:54:45 AM    

DISSIDENT MONKS IN VIETNAM FACE HOUSE ARREST - (RFA)

Vietnamese authorities have arrested a leader of a banned Buddhist group in what appears to be a widening crackdown on the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam (UBCV), Radio Free Asia (RFA) reports.


4:50:01 AM    

'VOICE OF MARTYRS' FIND DETAINED CHINESE CHRISTIANS - ANS

A leading human rights organization confirmed Friday, October 10, it had discovered the whereabouts of three Chinese Christians who disappeared last month after being arrested for their influential role in China's growing house church movement.


4:39:28 AM    

PAKISTANI CHRISTIANS RELEASED ON BAIL - Compass Direct

 

ISTANBUL, October 10 (Compass) — Four Christians in Pakistan accused of killing a Roman Catholic priest were ordered released on bail, 11 weeks after they were arrested by local police. In a September 24 hearing, the Okara Additional Sessions Court accepted a petition to release Christians Sharif Masih, Naimat Masih, Aslam Masih, and Parveez Masih, along with Muslim suspect Mohammed Afzel. However, they still face charges of attempted armed robbery and the murder of Fr. George Ibrahim in Renala Khurd, a village 180 miles south of Islamabad. No date has been set for their trial hearings to begin. Attorneys representing the four Christians have appealed for a new inquiry into the priest’s unsolved murder. “They must drop the case against these men, because they are all innocent,” a church source stated. Fr. Ibrahim, 38, was shot to death on July 5 by six gunmen who forced their way into his home in the middle of the night. Compass has learned that a sixth suspect, an elderly man apprehended in previous theft cases, has been arrested within the past two weeks as a possible accomplice in the murder.


4:33:43 AM    

Pastor in Vietnam Tortured ‘Like Christ on the Cross’

Believers in Kontum Province Targeted by Anti-Christian Campaign

Special to Compass Direct

LOS ANGELES (Compass) -- Authorities in Vietnam’s Kontum province have found a way to add cruel symbolism to their unwarranted persecution of Christians.

When Pastor A En of the Chu Pa Evangelical Church answered a summons to appear before local security police on August 20, he was forced to stand "like Christ was hung on the cross," with arms outstretched, but on one foot only. A En was forced to hold that position from 8 until 11 a.m. When he moved or put down his other foot, he was taunted, punched and kicked.

When the police finally released A En, he crumpled to the ground, unable to move. An elder of his church had to carry him out of the police station. Pastor A En’s church of 70 members was disbanded and does not dare meet together for worship.

Pastor A En’s church of 70 members was disbanded and does not dare meet together for worship.

Most of the reports of oppression of Vietnam’s minorities in the Central Highlands has focussed on the large provinces of Dak Lak and Gai Lai. However, reports from the smaller, more remote province of Kontum, which borders Cambodia and Laos, indicate that Christians there have not been spared.

Several incidents reported by indigenous Christian workers earlier this year have just come to light. Evangelist A Yen was summoned to the police station in Dak Rim Commune and ordered to give up his faith and his pastoral activities. They told him if he would not cooperate, they would use "another method."

When A Yen resolutely refused, they muttered that he was a "very hard-headed boy" and pretended to let him go. As he was walking out of the door, a policeman named A Hoai was waiting for him with a thick stick. The policeman batted A Yen viciously across the knees three times. When he fell to the ground, officers pounced on his leg, opening a deep wound which bled profusely.

Alarmed at the large amount of blood, police released A Yen, who fled to the home of a colleague in the next province of Quang Ngai. He recovered there before daring to return to his home in Kontum.

In separate incidents, two evangelists who returned last February to Sa Thay District in Kontum from a Bible study seminar in the south were summoned by the public security police of their respective communes. Evangelist Ksor Lui was hit in the face repeatedly by police, who questioned what he had studied. Ksor Lui was ordered not to leave his home to propagate his faith.

Evangelist Ksor Lor was hit on the head so hard that he was unconscious for several minutes. Officials forbade him to gather any Christians for public worship. Neither man can now hold church services, but they courageously meet to instruct Christians in cells of a family or two.

Compass received the report on Pastor A En from a source in Vietnam who managed to bypass Vietnam’s censors and send out an e-mail with related photos. A portion of the source’s compelling appeal, written in late August and translated from Vietnamese, follows.

"Dear Sirs,

"I am sending herewith photos concerning Christian Montagnards who have been savagely persecuted by Vietnamese communist authorities. Many have been beaten and jailed. Others must abandon their homes out of fear. Wives and children flee to the forest for safety.

"Please do not forget the Montagnard Christians, who are of the same blood as we. Please join hands with us and send this to the media -- journalists and TV networks -- and to human rights groups and representatives of the people of conscience around the world.

"The Montagnard Christians -- what crime have they done to warrant such gratuitous suffering? Their only crime is to believe in God and to meet with others to worship Him."

"Do communists have a conscience? The Montagnard Christians -- what crime have they done to warrant such gratuitous suffering? Their only crime is to believe in God and to meet with others to worship Him. Government officials refuse to grant permission for this.

"But why should people have to ask permission for what is freely allowed in most of the world where individual and communal rights are respected? Why in Vietnam do people have to beg their government to do honorable and worthy things? If Christians don’t ask permission, and go ahead and worship anyway, they are treated as criminals. The public security police threaten them as if they were hardened criminals. Why? Why?

"The kind of ‘freedom’ the communists brag about falls a million times short of the freedom in many other countries of the world. It is ‘communist freedom.’ Did Ho Chi Minh -- and does the Communist Party today -- really hold to such freedom?

"It is impossible to know how much blood and how many bones were sacrificed to liberate our people. But what is the result of this ‘liberation?’ The people of Vietnam are only bound in the freedom of the communist variety. If you compare the meaning of freedom in most countries of the world with the freedom of Vietnam, they are different beyond imagination. In our kind of freedom, the very essence of real freedom is missing.

"Vietnamese authorities are fond of bragging that our people are much freer than most other people in the world. But you must understand that communist freedom is the inverse of real freedom."

www.compassdirect.org


4:26:24 AM    





© 2004 Radio Free China
Last Update: 4/4/2004; 9:55:00 AM

Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website.

 


Radio Free China
email version


powered by Bloglet
October 2003
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
Sep   Nov

WRITE ME

Powered by TagBoard
Message Board
Name

URL or Email

Messages(smilies)

Hit refresh button
to update message board




Net2Phone

blogs4God - a Semi-Definitive List of Christian Blogs Rate this blog


Listed on Blogwise
Blogarama - The Blog Directory


Subscribe to "Radio Free China" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.
Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.