Saturday 5 December 2009

5/12/2009 - China Sentences 10 Christian Leaders To Prison, Labor Camps

China Sentences 10 Christian Leaders To Prison, Labor Camps

Posted on: 2009-12-05 13:46:52
By Worthy News Asia Service with Worthy News' Stefan J. Bos



BEIJING, CHINA (Worthy News)-- China has sentenced 10 Christian leaders to long prison terms and forced labor camps as part of a wider government crackdown on unauthorized worship services, Worthy News learned Saturday, December 5.

Chinese Christians and rights activists confirmed that the leaders are from the large Linfen House Church, whose 50.000 members meet in buildings and private homes of individual believers in Shanxi province.

Five Linfen leaders, a man named as Li Shuangping and women Yang Hongzhen, Yang Caizhen, Gao Qin (also known as Gao Fuqin) and Zhao Guoai, received sentences of two years "re-education through labor camps" on November 30, said advocacy group China Aid Association (CAA), which has close links with house churches.

They were sentenced for "gathering people to disturb the public order" when organizing a prayer rally with some 1,000 believers on September 14, after their church was attacked by hunderds of police, according to Christians.

CAA said the detentions came after Pastors Yang Rongli, Wang Xiaoguang, Yang Xuan, Cui Jiaxing, and Zhang Huamei were sentenced up to seven years in prison on November 25 for "illegally occupying farming land" and "disturbing transportation order by gathering masses."

"Sister Yang Rongli received a seven years [imprisonment] sentence on both charges. For the first charge Pastor Wang received three years, brother Yang Xuan three and a half years and Cui Jiaxing four and a half years [imprisonment]...Sister Zhang Huamei was found guilty of the second charge and sentenced to four years in prison," CAA explained.

APPEAL PLANNED

All ten Christian leaders reportedly plan to appeal and protest what CAA called "these brutal and illegal actions."

"To arbitrarily send five innocent citizens to labor camps is in direct violation against the international human rights covenants and norms the Chinese government has signed and even ratified," said Bob Fu, a former house church pastor who now leads CAA .

"This case shows the Chinese government is determined to be on the wrong side of history by clenching its power with suppressing the basic freedom of religion and conscience for Chinese citizens. We call upon the international community to hold these rights abusers accountable," he added.

China has defended its human rights record, saying Christians are free to worship with the official churches. However observers say many of the country's estimated 130 million Christians prefer to worship outside control of the Communist government.

Monday 14 September 2009

14/09/2009 - Colombia Pastor Assassinated By Suspected Paramilitaries

Colombia Pastor Assassinated By Suspected Paramilitaries

Posted on: 2009-09-14 11:22:58
By Worthy News Staff

BOGOTA, COLOMBIA (Worthy News)-- A Colombian pastor has been shot and killed at his home in front of his wife and church members, the latest in a series of deadly attacks against Christians in the South American nation, Christian rights investigators said Monday, September 14.

Rafael Velasquez, the 41-year-old pastor of the evangelical Foursquare Gospel Church in the town of Maranonal, died instantly following the attack by three masked gunmen last Sunday, September 6, said Britain-based advocacy group Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW).

The attack took place after a church service, CSW added. "The armed and masked men broke into Pastor Velasquezs home and shot him dead in front of his wife and six young members of his church."

Paramilitary groups vying for power in the region are thought to be responsible for the pastors murder.

LARGER PATTERN

CSW said the situation in Cordoba is part of "a larger pattern of severe violations of religious liberty in Colombia." Over 200 churches have been forcibly closed and more than 35 pastors have been assassinated in different parts of the country during the last three years, CSW told Worthy News.

At least fifteen pastors in the northern Cordoba region have reportedly been threatened over the last six months. Several church leaders "have been forcibly displaced" because of the threats against them and their families, said CSW, which has close contacts with Christians in Colombia.

A new CSW report details what the group calls "systematic religious persecution in areas under the control of armed groups."

CSWs National Director Stuart Windsor said that his group has urged the European Union and Britain to urge the Colombian government to properly investigate this murder as well as the other threats against church leaders. "We urgently ask the Colombian government to bring those involved in the resurgence of paramilitary activity in Crdoba to justice".