China Launches Crackdown On House Churches, Secret Document Shows
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent BosNewsLife with reporting from China
Added: Nov 14th, 2007 2:16 AM
BEIJING, CHINA
(BosNewsLife) -- China's Communist government has ordered a
crackdown on mushrooming underground house churches in a key
province as part of a nationwide plan against devoted Christians
across the country, according to a secret document leaked Tuesday,
November 13, and obtained by BosNewsLife.
The respected
advocacy group China Aid Association (CAA) said the order was issued
July 24, 2007, by the Duodao District Committee Office of Jingmen
Municipality of the Communist Party of China in Hubei province.
The document entitled 'Notice on Forwarding Work Plan for
Special Administration on Christian Activities in Duodao District'
was apparently sent to all township, Party committees, and other
relevant government officials. Several government institutions,
including the District Bureau for Religious Affairs of Ethnic
Minorities and a branch of one China's main law enforcement
agencies, the Public Security Bureau, were involved in formulating
the secret plan, the document revealed.
Although it "was
issued on a local level it does reveal that the central government
has directed a national campaign specifically against unregistered
Christian house churches" CAA told BosNewsLife. The secret campaign
was launched based on information from, among others, "leading
comrades" in the national government, local authorities and a
government-backed conference "on special administration on
Christianity," according to the document.
"SECRET
SEMINAR"
CAA said it learned that China's government
"convened a secret National Christian Working Seminar" to discuss
the pending crackdown. The document said China wants to "Fight
against infiltration activities by hostile overseas forces under
the guise of Christianity and safeguard the stability of society and
in the religious arena."
It also urged government-sanctioned
patriotic Christian organizations "to work closely with the public
security agents", to "establish a socialized mechanism of management
of religious affairs." The crackdown started June 15 and ends
November 30 and includes "propaganda, actions, and inspection," the
document showed.
It suggested authorities to also take
action against "self-appointed missionaries" or house church
leaders, by "education" and by "ordering them to stop their
activities and crack down on their activities according to law."
For unregistered churches, public security agencies have been asked
to "work with departments in charge of religious affairs and
resolutely stop their activities. In the meantime, the leaders
of the site should be investigated and due penalties rendered. All
their illegally acquired income shall be confiscated."
"SECURITY AGENCIES"
The paper also urged "public
security agencies" to "resolutely crack down" and "abolish" the
"unauthorized churches" who have been proven to preach "heresies,
religious fanaticism, feudal superstition, or harming the
physical and mental health of the people, and violating the laws of
the state."
"The whole campaign was asked to be carried out
in super secrecy," CAA said, referring to a key paragraph in the
document. "Without approval from the district's leading team for the
special administration, no agencies in all the areas shall disclose
the information in this document to any media. All the documents for
the special administration are classified as confidential and must
be printed in serial numbers. After the documents are used, they
shall be stored at a confidential room and their content must not be
disclosed," the document said.
CAA told BosNewsLife it also
received sets of registration forms from Anhui province where
believers and their relatives are allegedly forced "to fill these
forms including their personal data" such as when they became
Christians, where the meeting took place, as well as their home and
work addresses.
"RIGHTS VIOLATION"
"This campaign is
another clear example of absolute violation of the relevant
international human rights covenants and China's own [constitutional
regulations regarding] the protection of citizens [and] religious
freedom, said CAA President and former Chinese house pastor Bob Fu
in a statement to BosNewsLife. "We urge the Chinese government to
stop this kind of illegal secret practice if China intends to be a
true respected responsible stakeholder in the international
community."
Human rights groups have said China stepped up
actions against Christians ahead of next years' Olympic Games in
Beijing amid fears among officials that missionaries, church leaders
and others will use the event to spread Christianity in the
Communist-run nation.
The Communist Party, atheistic in its
ideology, only allows 'official' churches to operate, but a majority
of China's over 100 million Christians prefer to worship in
unregistered house churches, according to several human rights
investigators. Chinese officials could not immediately be reached
for comment on the secret document. They have however denied China
violates religious rights. (With BosNewsLife
Research).
Original article: Worthy News
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