Human Rights and Religious Liberty
UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Article 18 "Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance."
Thursday, January 08, 2004

The Most Serious Problem in Uzbekistan is Genocide Against Muslims. Times of Central Asia Jan 8 2004 7:03AM ET [Moreover - Central Asia news]
1:04:52 PM    comments []

Democracy Wall for China Mainland. (taken from email sent out by Democracy Wall)

Hello,

  Just a note to let everyone know that the Democracy Wall for China
Mainland has had some major improvements recently.

  The original WALL only showed the most recent 125 (later 150)
entries.  This limitation has been eliminated recently.  Also,
Visitors now have an opportunity to comment interactively to each
entry on the WALL by clicking the "Comments()" link at the bottom of
any entry.  To create a new entry on the WALL, Click "Respond on The
WALL" link at at the bottom of any entry.

  There are some useful related links recently added as well, to the
"menu of links", including links to anonymous remailers, and Real Time
Testing to see if a particular site URL is being blocked on the
mainland.  This item actually checks from a computer in mainland
China's capital.

  The WALL was originally created in support of the Global Petition
Campaign convened by Wang Dan in 1989.  The site was june4.org and
later june4.org.hk .  Both of these are now gone.

  I am working with the original webmaster of june4 to create a new
and improved version, which will be at june04.org and june04.net soon.
 Until then, a historical snapshot from the internet archive (with a
live link to the WALL) is available at june4org.tripod.com .

  -Admin, Democracy Wall
  
http://books.dreambook.com/vead/tiananmen.html


12:31:17 PM    comments []

KYRGYZSTAN: Religious freedom survey, January 2004

By Igor Rotar, Forum 18 News Service

In its survey analysis of religious freedom in Kyrgyzstan, Forum 18 News Service notes that both registered and unregistered religious communities appear to function freely, despite a 1996 presidential decree requiring religious communities to register. A dispute in 2003 about headscarves worn by Muslim schoolgirls seems to be over, however the closure of six mosques has not been overturned and the official who ordered the closure has not been punished. A Pentecostal Church which faced a massive tax bill and obstruction in registering affiliated congregations hopes that, due to international concern attributed to Forum 18's reporting, a solution will be found. 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. [read more...]

 F18News http://www.forum18.org/


12:13:48 PM    comments []

KOSOVO: No peace for Orthodox Christmas

By Branko Bjelajac, Forum 18 News Service

The Orthodox Christmas season this month has been marred in Kosovo by a series of violent incidents, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. A church was broken into and several items and some money were stolen, and a bus was attacked by local Albanians at the Decani monastery after the Christmas service. The attack on the church follows an earlier attack in November 2003. Officials of the United Nations administration (UNMIK) have condemned the attacks, the latest in a series since 1999 for which no arrests have ever been made. Speaking to Forum 18 about the attack on the bus, Fr Sava Janjic of the Decani monastery described it as a "demonstration of utmost religious intolerance" on Christmas "a holiday of peace and forgiveness". "What a paradox, that the attack was made at a moment when the head of UNMIK, only a hundred metres away, was speaking with the local Decani assembly president and appealed to him to show tolerance and understanding towards Decani monastery." [read more...]


12:12:03 PM    comments []

LAOS: IT’S OK TO SHOOT AT CHRISTIANS!

 “It’s OK to shoot at people as long as they’re Christians,” seems to be the sentiment of Lao officials, according to a report received by Christian Aid on Friday.

 Six women and children arrived in the city of Pakse in southern Laos Friday after being threatened in their home village in Attapue province because of their Christian faith. The village chiefs reportedly fined the Christians 150,000 kips (US$20 – about a months’ wage) for believing in Christ and demanded they renounce their Christian faith. If they did so, they could still remain in their village. Those who did not renounce their faith could be shot at. Two families decided to leave, having endured the fire of persecution for many months. "The situation is getting very unstable and dangerous,” two of them said.

 Their flight followed on the heels of raids on Christians in at least four other places in Attapue province in recent days. On December 27 police arrested six believers gathered for worship in Kang village and another Christian in Somsouk village. On December 28 authorities arrested three believers in Donphai village while conducting worship in their homes and another believer in Sanamsai City. Their only “crime” was believing on and worshiping Christ.

 According to reports, in every instance the arrests were conducted by provincial and district religious affairs officials, provincial and district police officials, and a village chief of each village. Bibles were also confiscated during the arrests.

 Other Christian leaders and believers are allegedly being sought by authorities and remain in hiding. Some reportedly have walked over 60 miles (100 km.) to avoid arrest.

 Details of persons arrested and being sought are available by writing to insider@christianaid.org and putting MI‑501 730‑CFL on the subject line.

This news article is taken from:
Missions Insider Report by Christian Aid
January 7, 2004  Vol. 5 No. 01
Visit website at http://www.christianaid.org


11:50:45 AM    comments []

Trial of Vietnamese Church Leader Set for January 13

Pastor arrested for resisting officers raiding a prayer meeting at his home.

Special to Compass Direct

 

HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam, January 7 (Compass) -- The trial of a Vietnamese house church leader arrested last August for “resisting an officer doing his duty” is set to begin January 13, sources said.

 

Pastor Bui Van Ba, general secretary of the Full Gospel House Church organization, will be tried before the People’s Court of District 11 in Ho Chi Minh City. Ba has been under house arrest since police raided a prayer meeting at his home on August 18, 2003.

 

On that date, about 25 Christians were attending a prayer meeting on the second level of the Ba home when a local public security officer named Tran Van Nhe entered without permission and demanded to search the house. Pastor Ba was not home at the time, and his wife, May, tried to prevent the police from going upstairs. The officer threw her aside and went upstairs, at the same time calling on his cell phone for reinforcements. Another pastor, Nguyen Nhu Hanh, took some photos.

 

Additional police quickly arrived. They grabbed Pastor Hanh, hitting his head repeatedly against a cement wall and destroyed the camera they had torn from his hand. The police then began slapping and punching the other Christians, sources said. Pastor Ba’s wife, who had been pushed around violently, fainted from severe chest pains.

 

Pastor Ba arrived home at the peak of the altercation. Sources said he tried to reason with the police, but when he realized his wife’s precarious condition, his first concern was to get her to a hospital. Security police refused to allow her to be taken away.

 

When the assembled Christians declared their support for Pastor Ba in his effort to get his wife to a hospital, the security police attacked Pastor Ba, beating him violently and cuffing him. The police restrained the children of Pastor and Mrs. Ba, roughly clamping their hands over the mouths of children crying at the sight of their father’s beating. Police then hauled Pastor Ba to the station, along with Pastor Hanh and seven others.

 

Pastor Vo Van Lac then tried to convince the police to let him take Pastor Ba’s wife to the hospital. They tried to prevent him at gunpoint. When he told the police he was unafraid and would take her to emergency anyway, they locked the door with a lock of their own. Pastor Lac persisted and after much difficulty managed to take her to the emergency ward at the hospital.

 

At the police station, Pastor Ba was chained to a post while a very large policeman in civilian clothes approached and punched him three times in the head. Several police officers, including the local chief, stood by menacingly, openly making up a false story for their report.

 

In a police report published three months after the event, the police said, “When Mrs. May fainted, she was quickly taken to emergency by family members.”

 

Pastor Ba was next taken to another room and interrogated for an hour by four officers. He was told he would be held for three days of investigation. Then police stripped him of his clothes and threw him into a cell without a bed, blankets or a mosquito net. The seven other Christians were held and questioned for 12 hours before being charged with administrative violations and released.

 

Pastors Ba and Hanh were released from prison on August 19 after being held for 36 hours; Pastor Hanh with an administrative charge and Pastor Ba put under house arrest.

 

Vietnamese Christians advising Pastor Ba have used Vietnamese law to build a legal case asserting that it was the rights of Pastor Ba and family and the Christians at the prayer meeting that were violated. But Vietnam’s legal system will not allow Pastor Ba’s advisors to help defend him.

 

For Vietnam’s house churches, this is standard treatment, an experienced Vietnam watcher told Compass, despite the government’s guarantee of religious freedom.

 

In similar situations in the past, foreign embassies and news services have asked to send observers to trials like Pastor Ba’s scheduled for next week, but have been denied access.

 

Copyright 2004 Compass Direct


11:41:35 AM    comments []





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