Radio Free China
News from China & asia with a focus on human rights and religious liberty.
"Do you know what I want? I want justice--oceans of it.
I want fairness--rivers of it.
That's what I want. That's all I want." [Amos 5:24]

Thursday, July 01, 2004

Marchers in Hong Kong demand democracy. Hundreds of thousands of people marched through Hong Kong today, demanding full democracy and venting anger at China's Communist leaders for denying them the right to directly elect their government. [BreakingNews.ie - World]
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Thousands in HK protest march. A huge march takes place in Hong Kong, with protesters calling for full democracy and criticising their government. [BBC News | Asia-Pacific | World Edition]
. 7:09:34 PM    comments []trackback []

Xinhua's take on Hong Kong's "celebrations". China's official media reported on Hong Kong's "celebration" of the 7th anniversary of the handover, managing to not even mention the hundreds of thousands of protesters who took to the streets today. In the Xinhua report, one resident is quoted... [Feedster.com Results For: China]
. 7:07:08 PM    comments []trackback []

Sudan Villagers Recount Harrowing Ordeal. First come the airplanes. Then the horsemen who burn, rape and kill. Over and over, terrified villagers told the same story Thursday as U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan got a firsthand look at the crisis engulfing Sudan's Darfur region. [Associated Press headlines via GoUpstate.com]
. 7:05:47 PM    comments []trackback []

Hong Kong Residents Push for Democracy (www.washingtonpost.com). Hundreds of thousands of people gathered in sweltering heat and humidity and marched through the valleys of Hong Kong's gleaming skyscrapers Thursday in a bold and spirited protest against China's refusal to expand elections in this former British colony.  By Philip P. Pan. [washingtonpost.com - World]
. 7:04:22 PM    comments []trackback []

US reaffirms push for political reform in Hong Kong after mass street protests (AFP). AFP - The United States reaffirmed its policy to push for greater democracy in Hong Kong after more than half a million people took to the streets of the Chinese-ruled territory to back calls for political reform. [Yahoo! News - World]
. 6:59:41 PM    comments []trackback []

Hong Kong Stages Massive Democracy March. Angered by Beijing's decision ruling out full democracy in Hong Kong, hundreds of thousands of people marched Thursday to demand the right to choose their leader. [China - Topix.net]
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Hundreds of thousands take part in Hong Kong pro-democracy march. ABC Online Jul 1 2004 7:43PM GMT [Moreover - China news]
. 6:49:19 PM    comments []trackback []

Hundreds of Thousands Join Democracy March in Hong Kong [VOA]
Protesters call for greater democracy, end to Beijing's involvement in Hong Kong's affairs


. 5:17:06 PM    comments []trackback []

TURKMENISTAN: "Only two faiths are allowed, Islam and Orthodoxy" says deputy police chief

By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service

Abadan's deputy police chief has told Baptist Svetlana Gurkina that "in Turkmenistan only two faiths are allowed, Islam and Orthodoxy, while the rest are banned", local Baptists have told Forum 18 News Service. She was also subjected to crude remarks and threats to imprison her and confiscate her flat, if she continues to meet her fellow-Christians. Although criminal penalties for unregistered religious activity were formally lifted in May, unregistered Baptist communities have been hard-hit by the government's continued refusal to lift the ban on unregistered religious activity. Baptists in the capital Ashgabad have appealed to President Saparmurat Niyazov and government agencies to halt the ongoing persecution of Svetlana Gurkina. [read more...]


. 5:10:36 PM    comments []trackback []

KYRGYZSTAN: GOVERNMENT CONSIDERS COUNTERING CHRISTIAN MISSION

By Elizabeth Kendal
World Evangelical Alliance Religious Liberty Commission (WEA RLC)
Special to ASSIST News Service

AUSTRALIA  (ANS) -- In January 2004 Forum 18 (F18), which monitors religious freedom in Communist and former Soviet states, published the results of its survey on religious freedom in Kyrgyzstan. F18 reported, “Both registered and unregistered religious communities appear to function freely, despite a 1996 presidential decree requiring religious communities to register. ...However, due to Muslim anger at conversions from Islam to Christianity, Forum 18 has been told by some that an official campaign against Christian proselytism may soon be launched.” One diplomat confided to F18 that authorities might soon launch a campaign against “proselytism” out of fear that the conversion of Muslims to Christianity may lead to social tensions and even conflict. (Link 1)

An article that appeared on IslamOnline (IOL) on 26 June 2004 entitled “Proselytization Eats Away at Muslim Majority in Kyrgyzstan” indicates that this threat may soon become a reality. (Link 2)

IOL correspondent Damir Ahmad reports that according to Russian media, “Five percent of the majority Muslim population in Kyrgyzstan have converted to Christianity due to the spreading missionary work in the former Soviet republic.”

According to Omurzak Mamayusupov, the director of Kyrgyzstan’s religious affairs committee, “The percentage of Muslims declined from 84 percent of the total population in 2001 to 79.3 percent in 2004. In terms of figures, he added, some 100,000 Muslims, of the country’s five million population, have converted to Christianity.”

Mamayusupov complains about the “full swing” missionary activity that includes the distribution of literature, books and videos, the building of churches, the establishment of Christian mission organizations, and the way missionaries “entice Muslim people away from their religion”.

IOL reports, “Mamayusupov warned that such organizations endanger the national security and run the risk of triggering an ethnic conflict. ‘We must nip this phenomenon in the bud to head off an ethnic conflict in Kyrgyzstan,’ he said.”

Mamayusupov claims that while Russian Orthodox and Muslims have lived peacefully for many years, the Catholic and Protestant missions “might ignite a religious war”.

According to IOL, Mamayusupov said that the Kyrgyzstan government is therefore considering the option of establishing a religious police department to counter Christian missionary work.

Mamayusupov’s language is alarmist and offensive. He appears content to take the easy road and blame social tensions on the peaceful victims of persecution rather than on the perpetrators who would unjustly deny them their basic and constitutional right to freedom of religion.

Kyrgyzstan has some 3,000 mosques, 2,000 of which have been built since the year 2000. Some 40 percent of Kyrgyzstan’s Muslims are Wahhabi. According to the US State Department Report on International Religious Freedom 2003, there are some 1,000 missionaries in Kyrgyzstan. Around 800 of them are Christians, primarily from Sth Korea, Germany and USA, while the others are Muslims from Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Pakistan. (Link 3)

HOSTILITY

One of the most extreme cases of grassroots persecution against converts occurred in the village of Kurkol in Djalalabad Oblast in January 2001. The local Muslim Religious Board complained that some 130 Muslims had recently converted to Christianity. More than one thousand locals convened a meeting and demanded that four ethnic Uzbeks, all recent converts to Christianity, leave the village.

That incident was pre-war on terror. If Islamic anti-Western, anti-Christian sentiment, solidarity and identification are rising in Kyrgyzstan as much as they are rising everywhere else across the Muslim world, then we can expect social tensions to be increasing and the government to come under increasing pressure to counter Christianity.

It is to be hoped that the secular and reform-minded government of President Askar Akayev will reject attempts to curtail Kyrgyzstan’s religious liberty.

Links

1) F18News 7 January 2004
KYRGYZSTAN: Religious freedom survey, January 2004
By Igor Rotar, Central Asia Correspondent, Forum 18 News Service
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=222 

2) Proselytization Eats Away At Muslim Majority In Kyrgyzstan
By Damir Ahmad, IOL Correspondent
http://islamonline.net/English/News/2004-06/26/article04.shtml

3) US Department of State IRF report 2003: Kyrgyzstan.
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2003/27209.htm 
. 5:07:27 PM    comments []trackback []

Organisers claim 350,000 at Hong Kong democracy protest  [ChannelNewsAsia]
. 9:20:27 AM    comments []trackback []

Thousands Join Pro-Democracy March in Hong Kong. Protesters on Thursday demanded the right to elect their own leaders and lashed out at Beijing for clamping down on the territory's democratic aspirations. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. [The New York Times > International]
. 9:18:57 AM    comments []trackback []

Proverbs 3:3-4. Let not steadfast love and faithfulness forsake you; bind them around your neck; write them on the tablet of your heart. So you will find favor and good success in the sight of God and man. [English Standard Version Bible Daily Verse]
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Protesters pour onto HK streets [CNN World]
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China selling organs of executed prisoners (WorldNet Daily). An outlawed religious sect in China is charging the government with torturing prisoners, executing them and trafficking in their body parts. The charge, by the banned Falun Gong group, is backed up by Chinese doctors and human rights experts who keep tabs on activities of the Beijing government. [Yahoo! News - Search Results for China Human Rights]
. 9:14:01 AM    comments []trackback []

Mongolian Opposition Takes Over State TV Station (www.washingtonpost.com). Mongolia's opposition, angry about being denied air time during disputed elections, took over state television briefly on Thursday and demanded on air that the election results be recognised. By Reuters. [washingtonpost.com - World]
. 9:11:34 AM    comments []trackback []

Ultrasound Or Ultra-Unsound Policy?. Gender imbalance woes in China blamed on modern technology A report recently in China's People's Daily looks at the growing gender imbalance in China and claims that it is as a direct result of modern technology which allows parents to find out the sex of an unborn child and then terminate the pregnancy if the child is a female. According to the report the National Population and Family [China Letter-News and Human Rights]
. 9:07:40 AM    comments []trackback []





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Last Update: 7/31/2004; 11:51:05 PM

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