Christianity 'close to extinction' in Middle East
The Telegraph (Britain)
Christianity faces being wiped out of the "biblical heartlands" in the Middle East because of mounting persecution of worshippers, according to a new report.
The study warns that Christians
suffer greater hostility across the world than any other religious group.
And it claims politicians have been
“blind” to the extent of violence faced by Christians in Africa, Asia and the
Middle East.
The most common threat to Christians
abroad is militant Islam, it says, claiming that oppression in Muslim countries
is often ignored because of a fear that criticism will be seen as “racism”.
It warns that converts from Islam
face being killed in Saudi Arabia, Mauritania and Iran and risk severe legal
penalties in other countries across the Middle East.
The report, by the think tank
Civitas, says: “It is generally accepted that many faith-based groups face
discrimination or persecution to some degree.
"A far less widely grasped fact
is that Christians are targeted more than any other body of believers.”
It cites estimates that 200 million
Christians, or 10 per cent of Christians worldwide, are “socially
disadvantaged, harassed or actively oppressed for their beliefs.”
“Exposing and combating the problem
ought in my view to be political priorities across large areas of the world.
That this is not the case tells us much about a questionable hierarchy of
victimhood,” says the author, Rupert Shortt, a journalist and visiting fellow
of Blackfriars Hall, Oxford.
He adds: “The blind spot displayed by
governments and other influential players is causing them to squander a broader
opportunity. Religious freedom is the canary in the mine for human rights
generally.”
The report, entitled
Christianophobia, highlights a fear among oppressive regimes that Christianity
is a “Western creed” which can be used to undermine them.
State hostility towards Christianity
is particularly rife in China, where more Christians are imprisoned than in any
other country in the world, according to the report.
It quotes Ma Hucheng, an advisor to
the Chinese government, who claimed in an article last year that the US has backed
the growth of the Protestant Church in China as a vehicle for political
dissidence.
“Western powers, with America at
their head, deliberately export Christianity to China and carry out all kinds
of illegal evangelistic activities,” he wrote in the China Social
Sciences Press.
“Their basic aim is to use
Christianity to change the character of the regime...in China and overturn it,”
he added.
The “lion’s share” of persecution
faced by Christians arises in countries where Islam is the dominant faith, the
report says, quoting estimates that between a half and two-thirds of Christians
in the Middle East have left the region or been killed in the past century.
“There is now a serious risk that
Christianity will disappear from its biblical heartlands,” it claims.
The report shows that
“Muslim-majority” states make up 12 of the 20 countries judged to be “unfree”
on the grounds of religious tolerance by Freedom House, the human rights think
tank.
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