Pakistan

CHRISTIAN PERSECUTION SET TO RISE IN 2019

50th logo

50th logoAS JEREMY HUNT ANNOUNCES REVIEW INTO ATTACKS, RELEASE SAYS NIGERIA, CHINA AND INDIA ARE COUNTRIES OF SPECIAL CONCERN FOR THE COMING YEAR

Nigeria, India and China are countries where Christians face increased persecution in the coming year, warns Release International.

The warning comes as Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt insists the UK must do more to help persecuted Christians around the world.

Jeremy Hunt has ordered a review into an estimated 215 million Christians who face violence and discrimination. According to official figures, violence against Christians is rising, with 250 killed each month.

‘Release warmly welcomes this review into what is a worrying upward trend in persecution against Christians,’ says Paul Robinson, the CEO of Release International. ‘And we back the call for the UK to do more to support the suffering Church worldwide.’

Christmas attacks

This Christmas, militants attacked Christians in Nigeria; a planned attack was foiled in Karachi, Pakistan, and security has been tightened around churches in Egypt ahead of the Coptic Christmas, on January 7.

Partners of UK-based Release support the view that persecution is rising and warn the trend is set to continue into 2019.

Among the countries named by Release as of particular concern for 2019 are Nigeria, India and China.

Nigeria

In Nigeria, Fulani militants look set to continue devastating attacks against Christians in the north and central Nigeria. In the first six months of 2018 alone, they killed up to 6,000 and drove 50,000 from their homes.

A Release partner said, ‘The escalation in killing is very clear. There is a deliberate plan to destroy and take over the predominantly Christian communities in the region.’

The heavily armed Fulani militants are following in the footsteps of Boko Haram by driving Christians out of the north, believes a Release partner, who describes the attacks as ‘a strategic modern-day jihad.’

China

China has seen a sharp increase in government opposition to religion, including Christianity.

Tough new rules, which came into effect in 2018, have banned children and young people from church meetings. In some areas, house churches unwilling to come under state control have split down in order to survive. They continue to meet in small groups limited to 15 people to avoid coming under scrutiny by the authorities.

China has been continuing a policy of removing Christian symbols and closing churches. Increasingly, they are targeting the larger unregistered house churches. A Release partner believes they have been emboldened to close these higher profile churches by the lack of opposition from the West. ‘The government wants to reduce Christianity to just a minor activity by unimportant older people,’ says a Release partner.

India

In India, attacks against Christians by Hindu nationalists are on the rise. Right-wing Hinduism which is intolerant of other faiths has been gaining ground since the BJP took power in 2014.

Violent mobs have broken up prayer meetings, several states have passed laws prohibiting so-called forced conversion (effectively outlawing all evangelism), and pastors have been attacked.

One pastor told Release how he had been thrown off a moving train for carrying Bibles in a rucksack. His attackers yelled, ‘These people are spoiling our religion!’ and threw him on to the platform. They fractured his skull, shoulder bone and ankle, and knocked out several teeth. The pastor continues to preach the gospel despite opposition from hard-liners.

Release is providing Bibles in local languages to replace those the militants destroy and is giving vital legal aid and support to pastors who have been arrested.

Pakistan

Other countries of specific concern for 2019 include North Korea, Eritrea and Pakistan, where Christian Asia Bibi is still not free to leave, despite being acquitted of blasphemy.

‘Asia was considered guilty merely because she had been accused,’ says Release Chief Executive, Paul Robinson. ‘She was accused merely because she was a Christian.

‘All-too-often Pakistan’s Christians are viewed as blasphemers-in-waiting, whose continued existence can no longer be tolerated. Such intolerance of so many Christians in so many countries sets the tone for 2019. We must continue to watch and pray and stand up for freedom of faith.’

Release International is active in more than 30 countries around the world, supporting pastors, Christian prisoners and their families; supplying Christian literature and Bibles, and working for justice.

Release is celebrating its 50th anniversary of serving persecuted Christians through its international network of missions.

ENDS