June 3, 2025
July 4, 2024

Over 200 Christians arrested in Eritrea in past twelve months

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The East African country of Eritrea has been ranked as one of the most dangerous countries in the world for being a follower of Jesus.<br><br>A 3 July report by UK-based Release International, an organisation that covers the persecuted Church worldwide, states that at least 218 Christians had been arrested in Eritrea within the past 12 months, many of them women and children.<br><br>“This latest crackdown means that around 400 Christians are currently imprisoned – indefinitely, without trial or charge – because of their faith,” the report states. It highlights that between January and May this year, 110 Christians were seized.<br><br>“In the last round of arrests some children have been arrested with their parents, and in some cases the whole family is in prison,” said Dr. Berhane Asmelash, a former prisoner of faith, and local partner for Release International.<br><br>“We are very concerned for the physical and mental wellbeing of the children, some of whom are only two years old. This is totally unacceptable, and we strongly condemn this inhuman act by the Eritrean government,” he said.<br><br>Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in 1993 after 30 years of war. The former leader of the independence movement, Isaias Afwerki, has since ruled the country in a way that has amounted to a totalitarian dictatorship. <br><br>Afwerki initially led the country towards democratic governance, but then became increasingly authoritarian, with religions and Churches paying a heavy price. His government recognises only four state religions, namely the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church, Sunni Islam, the Catholic Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Eritrea. But even with these that are recognised, the government keeps tight control over their activities, their finances and preaching.<br><br>“Speaking out about persecution or government interference in church matters is not tolerated at all,” states Open Doors, a non-denominational mission supporting persecuted Christians around the world.<br><br>Ellis Heasley, the public affairs officer for Christian Solidarity Worldwide, told <em>Crux</em> in an earlier interview that “in Eritrea, Christians continue to face widespread imprisonment and other violations of their fundamental human rights".<br><br>“Many will be familiar with the case of Abune (Father) Antonios, the legitimate patriarch of the Orthodox Church who died on 9 February 2022 following 16 years under house arrest," Heasley said. "He had been removed from office in 2006, in violation of canon law, for repeatedly objecting to government interference in ecclesiastical affairs and refusing to excommunicate members of the Orthodox renewal movement.<br><br>"He died amidst allegations he was being injected with an unknown substance that had detrimental effects on his health. The patriarch’s continued and unjust detention throughout the final years of his life is indicative of the Eritrean authorities’ persisting hostility to Christian groups in the country. The government has effectively ‘captured’ the Orthodox Church, controlling its finances, selling its assets, approving and imposing leaders and imprisoning priests and others who object,” Heasley said.<br><br>The recent Release International report comes at the same time the US State Department released its International Religious Freedom Report in which Eritrea is listed as a so-called Country of Particular Concern due to “having engaged in or tolerated particularly severe violations of religious freedom”.<br><br>Nigerian Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama of Abuja told <em>Crux</em> that violating the right to belief fundamentally violates all other freedoms: “It goes hand in hand with freedom of expression, freedom of speech and assembly, and when religious freedom is restricted, all these rights are at risk."<br><br>“And for this reason, religious freedom is often the bellwether for other human rights,” Kaigama said.<br><br>He added that too often when religious freedom has come under assault in several parts of the world, the media has neglected its coverage.<br><br>“A journalist jailed in Iran is likely to get more attention than three thousand Christians killed or enslaved in Sudan,” he said. <br><br><em>Photo: An Eritrean woman crosses a street adjacent to the Cathedral and Catholic Mission compound in Asmara, Eritrea, 3 July 2007. Frustrated avant-garde architects from an architecturally conservative Europe used Asmara as an experimental site for radical new designs, leaving a unique legacy valued by experts worldwide. Asmara was developed by Italian colonisers in a massive construction boom in the 1930s. (Photo credit should read PETER MARTELL/AFP via Getty Images.)</em>
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