CHRISTIAN
PERSECUTION ON A GLOBAL SCALE, by Frank
Vernuccio 2/27/17
Strangely missing in the
debate about President Trump’s temporary travel restrictions, which is
significantly less dramatic that President Carter’s actions in response to the
Iranian embassy takeover, and roughly similar to President Obama’s actions in
2011, is the near total exclusion of Christians from U.S. Middle Eastern
refugee programs over the past eight years.
In a recent CBN interview,
President Trump announced a sharp change in policy, noting that Christians in
the Middle East have “been horribly treated. Do you know if you were a
Christian in Syria it was impossible, at least very tough to get into the
United States? If you were a Muslim you could come in, but if you were a
Christian, it was almost impossible and the reason that was so unfair,
everybody was persecuted in all fairness, but they were chopping off the heads
of everybody but more so the Christians. And I thought it was very, very
unfair.” The move is overdue. Christians have been subjected to extraordinary
maltreatment across the globe.
The Ethics and Liberty Review Commission has reviewed the latest data from the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, and outlined the five key facts
concerning Christian persecution.
1. In China, Christian
communities have ‘borne a significant brunt of the oppression,’ with numerous
churches bulldozed and crosses torn down.
2. In Sudan, the government stiffened penalties for both apostasy and blasphemy.The regime prosecutes Christian pastors on trumped-up charges and marginalizes the country’s minority Christian community.
2. In Sudan, the government stiffened penalties for both apostasy and blasphemy.The regime prosecutes Christian pastors on trumped-up charges and marginalizes the country’s minority Christian community.
3. Boko Haram continues
to attack with impunity both Christians and many Muslims.From bombings at
churches and mosques to mass kidnappings of children from schools, Boko Haram
has cut a wide path of terror across vast swaths of Nigeria and in neighboring
countries, leaving thousands killed and millions displaced
4. The situation is
“particularly grave” for Evangelical and Pentecostal Christians in Eritrea.The
government requires all physically- and mentally-capable people between the
ages of 18 and 70 to perform a full-time, indefinite, and poorly-paid national
service obligation, which includes military, development, or civil service
components. There are no exemptions for conscientious objections and
individuals completing their national service obligation in the military are
prohibited from practicing their religion. Failure to participate in the
national service results in being detained, sentenced to hard labor, abused,
and having one’s legal documents confiscated.
5. The report notes
numerous incidents over the past year of Iranian authorities raiding church
services, threatening church members, and arresting and imprisoning worshipers
and church leaders, particularly converts to Evangelical forms of Christianity.
Since 2010, authorities ‘arbitrarily arrested and detained more than 550
Christians throughout the country.’ As of February 2016, approximately 90 Christians
were either in prison, detained, or awaiting trial because of their religious
beliefs and activities.”
According to a Vatican Radio report translated by The Blaze in “2016, nearly 90,000 Christians were
martyred around the world, according to a new study by an Italian research
group. According to the Center for Studies on New Religions…a Christian was
martyred about once every six minutes in 2016, making them the most persecuted
religious group in the world. Massimo Introvigne, director of CENSUR, told Vatican Radio last week that approximately 70 percent of the
martyred Christians were from ‘tribal villages’ in Africa because Christians
often refuse to take up arms during conflicts. The other 30 percent, according
to the study, were Christians who fell victim to terrorism or governmental
persecution. Still, the number of Christians who were martyred in 2016 is
likely more than 90,000 because the study was unable to include data from China
or India, two East Asian countries that have large Christian populations,
because of the ‘underground’ nature of churches in those countries.”
Open Doors notes that persecution took place in
over 65 nations. North Korea is ranked as the worst offender. “It is illegal to
be a Christian in North Korea and Christians are often sent to labor camps or
are killed if they are discovered.”.
Originally published on New York Analysis of
Policy and Government.
http://affluentinvestor.com/2017/02/christian-persecution-global-scale/
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