Chinese Military Police Ready to Crackdown 'Xinjiang'-Style: Nine Fushan Church Leaders Kidnapped
Contact: Annee Kahler, Media Coordinator, 267-210-8278, Annee@ChinaAid.org; Jenny McCloy, Directory of Advocacy, in Washington, DC, 202-213-0506, Jenny@ChinaAid.org; www.ChinaAid.org, www.MonitorChina.org
SHANXI, China, Sept. 29 /Christian Newswire/ -- On Friday, September 25, nine Fushan Church leaders, including Pastor Yang Rongli, were kidnapped by Shanxi PSB officers while traveling to Beijing to petition the central government for justice concerning the local authorities' brutal attack on September 13th. They were illegally seized without warrant, and have not been heard from since Friday night. After the arrests, local authorities forcibly confiscated all computers, TVs and other church-owned valuables, calling them "illegal materials." Remaining church leaders and active members were placed under house arrest and are now under constant surveillance.
On September 26, the central government stationed state military police inside the main Fushan Church in Linfen city, where 5,000 of the 50,000-member Linfen House Church network worship together weekly, to prevent them from entering the building or holding services. Military police now guard the building and the surrounding areas around the clock.
ChinaAid has since learned that the central government was and is directly responsible for the escalating crackdown campaign against the Linfen Church. Ironically twisting the facts, the Beijing PSB has categorized the Linfen Church incident as a "violent uprising" and resolved to use military force to subdue the alleged "unrest." Reliable government sources informed ChinaAid that a notice was sent to all relevant government agencies over the weekend, ordering them to be prepared to use military force to crackdown on the churches throughout China, in the same way the recent violent incident in Xinjiang was suppressed. They are calling the maneuver the "Xinjiang Model, " a method that resulted in the deaths of several hundred people in Xinjiang in August.
"To have military police occupy a peaceful church is an unprecedented tragic development in 60 years of PRC history, which itself shows the reality of today's situation regarding religious freedom in China," ChinaAid President Bob Fu stated. "The Chinese government has no reason to be fearful of the peaceful Christian church. We call upon the international community to continue to urge the Chinese government to respect Chinese citizens' religious freedom and to avoid shedding innocent blood."
ChinaAid denounces the comparison of the attack on the peaceful Fushan Church to the Xinjiang incident and the excessive use of military force to suppress the Linfen House Churches. We call for the immediate release of the kidnapped church leaders, and the rightful restoration of all church property. We further call on the Chinese central government to cease enacting the "Xinjiang Model" of military involvement to unjustly subdue a peaceful church populace.
We call on the international community to continue protesting the brutal treatment of Christians and the suppression of religious freedom in China.
For more ways to take action and contact authorities, go to www.ChinaAid.org, and see the full press release, 9/29/2009.