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]

Tuesday, November 09, 2004

China returns N Korea refugees. China repatriates up to 70 North Koreans caught in Beijing while allegedly preparing to seek asylum. [BBC News | Asia-Pacific | World Edition]
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China relaunches "Strike hard" campaign to curb Tibetan dissidence and religion - www.phayul.com (Phayul). In its latest attempt to intensify hard-line policies, the People's Republic of China (PRC) has relaunched the "strike hard" campaign to systematically curtail Tibetan political dissent and to control religious institutions. [Yahoo! News - Search Results for China Human Rights]
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Chinese Government Forcefully Extradited 73 North Korean Defectors. It was reported yesterday that the Chinese government forcefully extradited 11 North Korean defectors around November 2, who were arrested by the police while trying to enter the consulate of the Korean embassy ... [China - Topix.net]
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 DELEGATES CHALLENGED TO SPEAK UP FOR THE PERSECUTED CHURCH AT INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN HUMAN RIGHTS CONFERENCE

By Michael Ireland
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service

LONDON, ENGLAND  (ANS) -- About 1,000 delegates to the International Christian Human Rights Conference in London heard several speakers from around the world tell about their experiences with persecution and were challenged not to stand in silence after hearing powerful accounts of the persecuted church.


Delegates listened to speakers from China, Colombia, Eritrea and Sri Lanka tell them about the work they do and the persecution they endure.

Peter Xu founded a church in China which today runs into the millions. He claimed the church in China had grown from some 800,000 in the 1940s to an estimated 150 million today. He was a fellow prisoner of Brother Yun, the author of the bestselling Heavenly Man book, who describes Peter as his 'father in the faith.’

He was arrested five times, spending more than seven years in prison. On one occasion he was beaten by a martial arts expert, and then tied by his arms to an iron gate for four hours so his feet were lifted from the ground and it was hard for him to breathe.

Having remained silent up to that point, he told them when he was taken down: "I can't sell out my Lord or my friends." He said he felt so much love for them at that time, despite his arms being puffed and black, that when his interrogator got out his book to record his confession, he simply told him: "I thank you." When his interrogator heard that, he did not question him again, but sentenced him to four years in prison.

Astrid Zuluaga works as a regional coordinator for the Colombian Commission for Restoration, Life and Peace (CRVP). She said that very often women were the ones who suffered the consequences of the violence against the church which had seen 80 pastors and church leaders assassinated during 2002-2003.


She said: "We have many widows, wives of pastors who have been killed. Some of them have lost their husbands who have been kidnapped and taken to other places and disappeared. Women have seen their children taken away and forced to join the armed groups. Women who still cry out because they don't know where their sons and husbands are."

Dr Berhane Asmelash of Eritrea used his medical skills to serve his church and his country and then later as a church leader came to the UK for theological training. Today he is unable to return to Eritrea as it would almost certainly result in his imprisonment and probable torture.


Some 400 people are imprisoned for their faith in Eritrea since an edict in May 2002 banned all but three Christian denominations; Orthodox, Lutheran Evangelical and Roman Catholics. He explained how some Christians are tortured in prison and others exposed to malaria-carrying mosquitoes and locked in shipping containers in soaring temperatures.

He said: "People are only released if they agree to renounce their faith. Please pray for the government to reverse the edict and reopen places of worship. Please also pray for those in prison. We need to pray for people to speak out and not just to ignore the situation -- they can make a difference."

Godfrey Yogarajah is General Secretary of the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka and said that in the last year, 140 churches had been closed down. He also highlighted the danger posed to religious freedom by proposed anti-conversion legislation and constitutional reforms to make Buddhism the state religion.


He said: "You are our voice and your prayers and your voice have been an inspiration to us and we thank you for your burden for your persecuted brothers and sisters in Sri Lanka."

The delegates were challenged to respond to the needs of the persecuted church by saying together the pledge: "I pray that, as a follower of Christ, I will seek to comfort the persecuted and those who mourn. I will remember those in prison as if I were in prison and those who suffer for their faith as if I suffer. I will work for justice and truth. I will not stand in silence. I will tell someone else."

Mervyn Thomas, Chief Executive of CSW said: "My desire is to see Christians throughout this nation refusing to stand in silence at the incredible injustices being faced by the worldwide persecuted Church. I believe that on Saturday we made a big step to seeing Christians in the UK providing a loud voice in support of those in our family who have had their voices taken away."


Eddie Lyle, Chief Executive Officer of Release International said: "We want to resource you to speak out for the persecuted church, a church that is growing in these seriously embattled situations. I have said before that I have a problem with the phrase a silent majority. We want you to go from here as a seriously noisy majority."

Peter Kerridge, Chief Executive of London’s Premier Christian Radio, said: ''It is a great privilege to work with CSW and Release International to draw attention to the plight of so many in the persecuted church. My prayer is that we will motivate Christians around the UK to take positive action to help all they can. We can do so much but we can't stand in silence.''

Delegates also heard from Ben Rogers, author of A Land Without Evil and Advocacy Officer on South Asia for CSW. He spoke on religious persecution in Burma and Pakistan. Mark Butler of Release International and Dr Khataza Gondwe of CSW spoke about the religious violence in Nigeria.

Rev Greg Haslam, minister of Westminster Chapel, introduced the day and worship was led by David Hind of Nottingham Christian Centre. Rev Dr Rob Frost concluded the day by encouraging delegates to respond with action to the persecuted church.


Interviews may still be arranged with a number of the speakers, including Peter Xu of China, Astrid Zuluaga of Colombia, Godfrey Yogarajah of Sri Lanka and Dr Asmelash of Eritrea.

CSW is a human rights charity working on behalf of those persecuted for their Christian beliefs. We also promote religious liberty for all. Release International serves persecuted Christians in 30 nations around the world, by supporting pastors and their families who are being victimized, supplying Christian literature and Bibles and working for justice.

For more information, photographs, or to arrange an interview with any of the speakers, please contact Richard Chilvers, Communications Manager, CSW at richard.chilvers@csw.org.uk   or ring 020 8329 0045 or visit www.csw.org.uk

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China Announces ‘Change’ in Religious Policies

Government officials discuss new regulations while raids and arrests continue.

by Sarah Page

 

DUBLIN, November 9 (Compass) -- In a two-day international conference on religion and law held in Beijing on October 18 and 19, Chinese officials said they were open to changes in religious policy.

 

During the conference, Zhang Xunmou, director of the policy and legal department of the State Administration of Religious Affairs (SARA, formerly the Religious Affairs Bureau), said the days of issuing administrative orders on religious affairs were over. New laws would set clear limits on the authority given to local officials to control religious activity.

 

Zhang said existing laws and regulations were now inadequate after two decades of reform. He also claimed the new approach would be a paradigm shift in China’s religious policy.

 

However, Ji Wenyuan, deputy director of SARA, emphasized that China was unique and cautioned against the adoption of religious policies from the West, the South China Morning Post reported on October 23. In the past, Chinese Christian converts were accused of “collaborating” with the West and corrupting Chinese culture.

 

Asia News said the changes in religious policy were a positive step forward, but only if the government recognized religious freedom as a basic human right. On October 25, the news service quoted an anonymous source in Hong Kong who said the announcement was merely “cosmetic” -- a move aimed at “sheltering China from international criticism against its harsh religious policy.”

 

Zhang Qianan, a professor at Peking University, confirmed to reporters that while the constitution guarantees freedom of religion, this freedom was only available to groups recognized by the state.

 

Indeed, Ji’s cautious admonition of “change, but not yet” was borne out in a wave of arrests and raids carried out on Christians in October.

 

In mid October, a building belonging to a house church leader was raided by police. “They took everything from her -- all she has left is a mattress,” one source told Compass. “They watch her place all the time and someone is stationed outside the house 24 hours a day, seven days a week.” Bibles were also confiscated in the raid, along with other Christian literature and tapes.

 

In late October, another house church leader reported that authorities were watching him closely. One of his church meeting points was raided in the last few days of October, and many believers were arrested, beaten and questioned.

 

Information obtained during questioning led to raids on several other meeting points for the same house church network. The believers have now scattered and their pastor has gone into hiding.

 

One ministry reported a sharp increase in persecution throughout September and October, with a large number of arrests. One co-worker was beaten to death after she was arrested by police. A 70-year-old Chinese believer was also arrested in Xinjiang province; this man was hospitalized after a severe beating.

 

Another co-worker was arrested in Shaanxi province. Police confiscated all of the family’s belongings, “right down to their very last chair.”

 

Perhaps more significantly, four printing presses were shut down within the space of a month, when police discovered they were printing illegal Christian materials. One press operator was puzzled by the raids, saying “... we have never seen this type of crackdown before.”

 

Another source who verified the closure of one printing press said the owner was arrested and held on false charges while his warehouse was emptied of thousands of Christian books.

 

Officials said the new regulations proposed at the conference would strengthen the self-government of registered churches and reduce administrative costs for SARA. Tax laws and levies would also be applied to registered churches, some of which had amassed considerable wealth.

 

An article in the Shanghai Daily on October 19 seemed to indicate that changes were already underway. The article said the Bible would be placed on a recommended reading list for students in the city, along with a popular series of Kung Fu books. However, some parents interviewed by the newspaper said they were concerned that students would be adversely affected by what they read in the Bible.

 

After the changes were announced, deputy director Ji said that Beijing must tread carefully in making these reforms. He emphasized that social stability and harmony must be the basis for any new laws, stating, “A religion must be accepted not only by its own congregation, which follows its teachings, but also by non-believers who can live with it,” according to an article in the South China Morning Post on October 23.

 

Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell met with Chinese officials on October 25 to discuss human rights violations, The New York Times reported. Talks ground to a halt earlier this year after the U.S. proposed a resolution against China at the United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva.

 

Li Zhaoxing, China’s foreign minister, assured Powell that China was now willing to re-open the dialogue on human rights abuses.

 

Copyright 2004 Compass Direct


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