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China arrests dozens of underground pastors as part of a crackdown

A church spokesperson and family members said that police in China arrested dozens of pastors from one of the largest underground churches in China over the weekend. This is the most severe crackdown against Christians since 2018.

Marco Rubio, Secretary of State, condemned the detentions which came amid renewed tensions between China and the United States after Beijing expanded its rare earth export controls dramatically last week. He called for their immediate release on Sunday.

Sean Long, a spokesperson for the church, and Grace Jin, his daughter, confirmed that Pastor Jin Mingri was arrested at his home on Friday night in Beihai, a southern city.

Long said that the incident was part of a "new wave" of religious persecution in this year. He added that in recent months, police have questioned over 150 worshippers.

Long, speaking from his home in America, said that authorities had detained 30 pastors or church members across the country around the same period, but released five.

He added that about 20 pastors and leaders of churches remain detained.

Telephone contact with the Beihai Police was not possible. China's Ministry of Public Security did not respond immediately to a faxed comment request.

Jin, 56, was arrested in Beihai City No. 2 Detention Centre on suspicion of "illegal use of information networks", according to an official detention notice that Long provided. A notice of detention that Long had provided showed that Jin, 56, was being held in Beihai City No. This charge is punishable by a maximum of seven years in prison.

Supporters are worried that Jin and other ministers may be charged with illegally using the Internet to spread religious information.

He's been hospitalised for diabetes in the past. Grace Jin stated that they were concerned because he needs medication. "I was also told that lawyers were not allowed to speak with pastors. This is very worrying to us."

The crackdown follows a new rule from China's top religious regulator that banned unauthorised online sermons or religious training for clergy as well as "foreign colusion".

Last month, President Xi Jinping vowed also to "implement strict laws enforcement" and advance the Sinicisation religion in China.

Official figures indicate that China has over 44 million Christians who are registered in state-sanctioned churchs, with the majority being Protestants.

Tens of millions of people are believed to be members of "house churches" which operate illegally and outside of the control of the Communist Party.

Long explained that Zion Church with its 5,000 regular members in nearly 50 cities quickly added new members during the COVID-19 Pandemic by using Zoom sermons and smaller, personal gatherings.

Jin, who is also known as Ezra founded the church in 2007, following his resignation as a minister for the official Protestant Church.

Long said that Jin, a graduate of Peking University's elite, converted to Christianity in 1989 after witnessing Tiananmen Square's crackdown.

In 2018, the police closed down its church in Beijing, China's capital, as part of a crackdown against major house churches. Long reported that earlier this year police detained temporarily 11 Zion Church Pastors.

Grace Jin stated that the government had placed travel restrictions for Jin in 2018 so that he couldn't visit his wife or three children, who were resettled in America.

She added, "I believe he knew that he could be jailed."

Bob Fu, founder of Christian NGO ChinaAid, stated that dozens of police officers forcedfully intercepted Jin in the middle of the month as he tried to board a flight bound for the United States from Shanghai's commercial hub. They also restricted his travel beyond Beihai.

Fu said, "The main reason is the explosive growth of Zion Church into a well organised network in recent times. This must have scared the Communist Party leadership." (Reporting and editing by Clarence Fernandez; Reporting by Laurie Chen)

(source: Reuters)