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Detainment / Arrest

  • Young Children Detained for Participating in Bible Lesson
    A girl has a small child on her back. The older one is smiling at the younger.
    Photo: PxHere

    A Bible lesson for young children that had taken place at a private home in Fuyang, Anhui, was raided by police on April 29th. In total, ten children between the ages of five and six, along with five adult teachers, were taken to the police station where they were detained for several hours. Some of the youngsters appeared to suffer severe emotional distress during the detention; and, throughout that time, the police only checked on them once.

  • Christians Sentenced for Alleged Illegal Business Activities
    Wang Honglan and her coworkers
    Wang Honglan and her coworkers.
    Photo: ChinaAid

    During April 2021, Chinese authorities arrested ten Christians in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, for allegedly running an illegal business operation. In their efforts to get Bibles into the hands of as many people as possible, the believers had legally purchased copies of God's Word at a retail price and resold them for a fee well below the original cost. (For more information on the charges against these church members, go to this report.)

  • "Gospel Warrior" Resumes Ministry Work
    Chen Wensheng and his wife are standing together.
    Chen Wensheng and his wife.
    Photo: ChinaAid

    As a former drug addict, Chen Wensheng understands firsthand the liberating power of Jesus Christ. Since experiencing spiritual freedom from bondage, he has become a ceaseless evangelist, sharing his faith with anyone who is willing to listen. In the past, he even expressed gratitude for his incarceration, since it gave him opportunities to testify of God's transforming love among fellow prisoners.

  • Appeal Denied for Three Christian Converts
    Abbas, Narges, and Mehran
    Left to right: Abbas Soori,
    Narges Nasri, and Mehran Shamloui.
    Photos: Article 18

    On March 8th, three Christian converts in Iran, including a woman pregnant with her first child, were sentenced to lengthy prison terms for participating in activities relating to their religious beliefs. (More details about the charges against these believers are available at VOMC's previously published report.)

  • Christian Pilgrims Harassed by Hindu Nationalist Group
    The front of two buses in India.
    Two buses in India.

    Two busloads of Christians that had embarked on a Lenten pilgrimage tour were stopped by members of a Hindu nationalist group on March 31st and subsequently handed over to police. The incident led to the physical and verbal assault of some Christian leaders.

  • Imprisoned Pastor Suffers Stroke
    Pastor Nasser Navard Gol-Tapeh is in a suit and seated on a sofa.
    Pastor Nasser Navard Gol-Tapeh
    Photo: Article 18

    In 2017, Pastor Nasser Navard Gol-Tapeh was sentenced to ten years in prison for his Christian ministry activities. Though pardoned and released in 2022, the pastor was suddenly rearrested on February 6th of this year. (Read more.)

  • Christian Man Charged for Alleged Facebook Posts
    A man dressed in orange overalls and cap is holding a straw broom and pulling a garbage bin.
    A sweeper in Pakistan.

    On March 17th, Pakistani federal agents took 24-year-old Arsalan Gill into custody on accusations of blasphemy. The charges allege that the Christian believer was responsible for sharing blasphemous content in Facebook groups. His arrest takes place amid a rising number of cases involving entrapment, whereby organized militant groups specifically target members of the country's religious minorities.

  • Imprisoned Christian Beaten for Medical Request
    Amir-Ali Minaei is outside.
    Amir-Ali Minaei
    Photo: Article 18

    Amir-Ali Minaei has been held in Tehran's Evin Prison since April 2024. The Christian man is presently serving a 43-month term for "propaganda activities against the regime through establishing a house church."

  • Unregistered Churches Face Increasing Oppression
    A smiling man is speaking behind a pulpit. There is a cross on the wall behind him.
    Photo: ChinaAid

    Two recently received reports indicate the ongoing coordinated opposition that members of unregistered house churches are facing throughout China. Since the groups are considered illegal, the authorities have tried using fines and arrests, along with threats and intimidation tactics, in their attempts to shut down the organizations.

  • Non-Compliant Catholic Bishop Rearrested
    A priest is holding a staff and has a headpiece on.
    Bishop Shao
    Photo: ChinaAid
     

    Peter Shao Zhumin, a Catholic priest who was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI as an auxiliary bishop, became the bishop of the Diocese of Wenzhou in 2016. However, over the years, Bishop Shao has stood in opposition to the dictates of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Not acknowledging its authority over the church, he refused to join the state-controlled Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association. In response, the official association appointed a different bishop to replace him; however, many members of the diocese do not recognize the association's appointment.