A total of 170 Protestant Christians have been jailed,
beaten and threatened with death by Eritrean security forces in a harsh
crackdown during February and March, Compass Direct news service reported April
9.
Since the Asmara government closed 12 Pentecostal and charismatic churches last
May, the tiny nation along the eastern tip of Africa has stalled official
registration status for all of these young Protestant churches, now containing
more than 20,000 believers, Compass reported.
In five separate incidents in four cities over the past two months, Eritrean
security police barged into worship services and even a wedding ceremony to
jail men, women and children for practicing what government officials called
"a new religion."
According to Compass, all the prisoners were held incommunicado while under
arrest. They were eventually released individually on bail to relatives or
friends, who were forced to put up their personal property as bond to secure
their release. No formal charges were filed against them, nor did they ever
appear before a court of law.
The Eritrean government recognizes only four "official" religions,
identified as Orthodox Christian (40 percent), Muslim (50 percent), Catholic (5
percent) and Evangelical Christian, a Protestant church begun in the late 19th
century by Swedish Lutheran missionaries, (2 percent).
Compass reported that the jailed Protestants, who were detained in humiliating
conditions from three to 15 days, were subjected to repeated beatings, cursing
and threats for refusing to return to the historically dominant Orthodox Church
faith.
In the first incident on Feb. 16, 17 members of the Rema Church in Adi-Quala,
70 miles south of the capital Asmara, were arrested by security police while
holding Sunday worship in a member's home. All were jailed for 15 days,
including the widow hosting the gathering and three other older women. Some of
the prisoners were reportedly beaten with sticks.
Two weeks later, security police raided a rented hall during a wedding ceremony
for a young Pentecostal couple in the coastal city of Massawa. The church
leader conducting the March 2 marriage service was arrested after the ceremony
concluded and jailed for five days.
The following week, 36 members of the Full Gospel Church were arrested for
three days when they gathered in a member's home in Keren, a Muslim-dominated
town 55 miles northwest of Asmara. Local police claimed that Muslims in the
neighborhood had complained to them about the March 9 gathering. The imprisoned
congregation included 16 women and seven soldiers. The soldiers received severe
beatings and hard labor punishments when sent back to military duty.
On March 16, 72 members of three congregations in Asmara were arrested during a
prayer and preaching service in a member's home in the Setanta Otoo district of
the capital. According to Compass, police jailed the worshipers from the Kale
Hiwot Church, the Full Gospel Church and the Rema Church in metal container
cells at the Maiserwa Military Prison near Keren. Although most of the
prisoners were young people, a Rema Church elder in his 60s was among them.
Designed as severe punishment cells, the metal containers had no windows and
only a small door, subjecting the prisoners to near suffocation and intense
physical discomfort, Compass reported. After 15 days, security police allowed
families to "bail" their jailed relatives, issuing a stern warning to
them that the Pentecostal believers must never again try to meet for worship or
evangelize anyone, anywhere.
In the last reported incident on March 23, members of Asmara's Philadelphia
Church were meeting for choir practice and Bible study on Sunday afternoon when
some 15 policemen armed with machine guns, pistols and long sticks entered the
premises. The 40 people present, three of them children, were taken by bus to
Police Station No. 4 in the Paradiso district, where officers reportedly kicked
and beat some of the men.
When the church's pastor learned about the arrests several hours later, he took
three other church members with him to inquire at the police station. All four
were promptly arrested as well, with the pastor isolated from the rest of his
congregation.
The morning after his arrest, the pastor was brought out into the prison
courtyard and publicly tortured and humiliated in front of his jailed
congregation. Guards forced the pastor, who limps noticeably from having polio
as a child, to take off his shoes and walk barefoot over sharp, jagged pebbles
for a half hour. Although his feet did not bleed, it was "very, very
painful," one source confirmed to Compass.
That same morning, the three children who had been separated from the rest of
the group were beaten and released, with strict warnings to "never
again" attend such religious meetings.
The Philadelphia Church prisoners were crammed into two cells, segregating the
men and women. One local source said there was barely room in the men's cell
for all of them to lie down to sleep at night. "We were told to relieve
ourselves in the cell, but there was no place for that," the source said.
"The cell was filthy and very hot, and we were suffocating to get air, a
witness said. The cells were kept locked all day except for a half-hour at 5
a.m. when prisoners were allowed out to go to the toilet.
The detained church members were later transferred to the Adi Abito Military
Prison outside Asmara, away from their pastor. Although military guards told
them that their pastor had denied his beliefs and promised to return to the
Orthodox Church, the congregation all refused to believe it. "Anyway,
Jesus is our Savior too, not just our pastor's," they reportedly told the
guards. "We will not deny Him."
After eight days in jail, the pastor and most of his congregation were released
on bail. Relatives who guaranteed bail for them were forced to sign a statement
acknowledging that if a bailed prisoner was caught meeting at the church
building or even in his home with more than three others, he would be liable
for execution.
From an earlier incident, Compass Direct reported, 74 Eritrean soldiers from
various Pentecostal congregations incarcerated more than a year ago remain
jailed at hard labor in a military prison near the southern port city of Assab
for refusing to recant their personal religious beliefs and return to the
Orthodox Church.
The soldiers, 13 of them women, were first arrested on Feb. 17 last year, along
with 59 civilians from three local congregations gathered for Sunday worship.
All 133 worshipers were released the following day, but two weeks later,
military authorities re-arrested the soldiers and incarcerated them at the Zone
Four Military Prison near Assab.
About 10 weeks after they were jailed, prison authorities put the Pentecostal
soldiers in solitary confinement in very small, unlighted cells. For weeks,
they were dragged out repeatedly to be beaten all over their bodies with iron
rods encased in plastic. "It was very hurtful, and we bled terribly from
these beatings," one of the flogged soldiers managed to inform a source.
"This was done in front of the others, while our tormentors demanded that
we deny our faith in Jesus."
Reportedly, several more soldiers "caught" reading their Bibles or
praying in small groups in recent months have been arrested and jailed with the
original 74 soldiers.
Families and friends of the jailed soldiers, who range from their early 20s to
40 years of age, have been refused any contact with them over the past 13
months. Several are married with families.
Although the 1997 Constitution of Eritrea guarantees religious freedom to all
citizens, Eritrea's totalitarian government has become increasingly restrictive
against the newer Protestant churches mushrooming across the country within the
past five years. Many are led by former members of the Medhanie Alam renewal
movement begun a decade ago within the Eritrean Orthodox Church.
Hundreds of these Christians and their spiritual leaders, excommunicated from
the Orthodox Church in 1997, flowed into existing Pentecostal churches. Others
began their own local fellowships.
Section Four of Article 19 of the 1997 Eritrean Constitution guarantees that,
"Every person shall have the freedom to practice any religion and to
manifest such practice." However, representatives of the government's
Religious Affairs Department are now insisting that in order to enjoy legal
status, religious groups must "conform to local traditions."
Last May, the Department of Religious Affairs ordered the Pentecostal and charismatic
congregations, as well as the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Buddhists and the
Bahai religious movement, to complete a wide-ranging application process. Until
their registration process was completed, the government decreed, these
churches and groups were prohibited from meeting.
Among the requirements were audited financial reports for the past 10 years; a
list of every member's address, contact information and personal property;
names and passport numbers of every foreign visitor; financial dealings with
all international sponsors; and a listing of which theological doctrines it
holds in comparison with other churches' beliefs.
When church leaders met with the newly appointed director of Religious Affairs
on April 1 to address the issue, he declared that he was uninformed on the
issue and would have to get back to them later about it.
"They are cheating us by always postponing our meetings about this,
changing the director of the department, and claiming our registrations are 'in
process,'" one church leader declared. "We have waited now for 11
months. Our government must act seriously, to reply to us in a responsible
way."