Asmara security police arrest 40 Protestant Christians in
past two weeks.
Special to Compass Direct
LOS ANGELES, January 4 (Compass) – At least 40 pastors,
elders and leading laymen from five of Eritrea’s banned
Protestant churches have been arrested from their homes or
offices in the past two weeks in the capital of Asmara.
Starting early on the morning of December 22, security
police began tracking down leaders of the Church of the Living
God, along with clergymen and elders in the Full Gospel, Rema,
Hallelujah and Philadelphia churches.
“The security office has a list of church leaders who
should be taken into custody,” a local source reported after
the raids began. All Christian worship is forbidden by the
repressive East African regime, even in private homes, except
under the auspices of the historic, officially recognized
Orthodox, Catholic and Lutheran churches.
During the initial series of pre-Christmas raids, one
Protestant pastor managed to escape from security authorities
shortly after his arrest.
Identified only as Pastor Simon, the evangelical leader is
believed to be in hiding in the city. His family has been
harassed and threatened almost daily by security authorities,
who are demanding that the parents locate their son and return
him to police custody.
Originally from one of the Medhane Alem revival groups
within the Orthodox Church, Pastor Simon is a minister in the
Church of the Living God.
In an apparent attempt to force Pastor Simon to turn
himself in, police have arrested a member of his church board,
a government worker in the capital’s Civil Servants Office
identified as Mr. Tesfagabiet.
Another of Pastor Simon’s parishioners, the owner of
Gazella Shoe Factory named Mr. Yemane, was also arrested on
December 22.
The same day, Full Gospel pastor Jorjo Gebreab was arrested
along with two lay leaders, businessman Solomon Mengesteab and
Berhane Araya, a government employee at the Ministry of Trade
and Industry. At least eight other Full Gospel pastors
arrested during the past two years remain jailed.
From the Rema Church, Pastor Abraham Tesfagergsh has been
arrested and sent to jail along with one of his church elders,
Habteab Oqbamichel. The latter’s December arrest marked
Oqbamichel’s fifth imprisonment for participating in Eritrea’s
outlawed evangelical churches since they were ordered to close
in May 2002.
Another elder from the Rema Church, identified only as Mr.
Yosief, was arrested at his Photo Asier shop, along with 15 of
his employees. Most of his staff members at the photo studio,
which remains sealed, are members of the Rema Church.
Police also targeted the Roma Music Shop, run by members of
the Philadelphia Church. The establishment was raided and then
sealed in the roundup, with all 15 people present at the time
taken to prison. The music shop was the main source of
Christian materials, music tapes and books for Protestant
evangelicals in Asmara.
In addition, police are reportedly searching for Pastor
Simon Tekie of the Philadelphia Church.
From the Hallelujah Church, police arrested the
denomination’s leading elder, an auditor named Mr. Aklilu.
Two other Protestant-owned businesses, the Galaxy Music
Shop and the Belul Photo Shop, were closed down and sealed by
security police “only because they have Christian owners,” a
source confirmed to Compass.
“This Christmas many people are celebrating their freedom
in different churches around the world for the birth of Jesus
Christ,” according to a source quoted in a December 26 press
release from London-based Release Eritrea. “But for the
Eritrean Christians, this is a dark day.”
Before the December arrests, at least 1,750 Eritrean
Christians were confirmed to be jailed in police stations,
military training camps and prisons in 12 locations across the
East African nation. To date 28 clergymen are among them, some
held in underground cells and metal shipping containers under
torturous conditions for refusing to recant their evangelical
beliefs.
On December 1, Pope Benedict XVI told Eritrea’s new
ambassador to the Vatican that the Catholic Church was “deeply
concerned that all citizens should be free to practice their
faith, and that no one should feel under threat or coercion of
any kind in this regard.”
Although the Catholic, Orthodox and Lutheran churches are
recognized officially by the Eritrean government, some of
their members have also been jailed and threatened by security
officials during the past year.
Orthodox Patriarch Abune Antonios was stripped of his
ecclesiastical authority in August and remains under house
arrest for opposing government interference in church affairs,
including the arrest of three Orthodox
priests.
Copyright 2006 Compass Direct
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