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Chinese Christians released from detention

Clashes at China Tibetan monastery: rights group
Beijing (AFP) April 13, 2011 - Clashes have erupted between security forces and locals at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery under lockdown in southwestern China after a monk set himself on fire and died last month, a rights group said. Armed police unleashed trained dogs on residents outside the Kirti monastery in Aba county in Sichuan province and beat them when they tried to prevent forces from entering the compound, the International Campaign for Tibet said. The US-based group said some had suffered "serious injuries" in Tuesday's clashes, without saying how many people were involved in the melee. Security forces were blocking food deliveries to those in the monastery, ICT added. The group, citing local residents, said security forces were attempting to remove some of the 2,000 monks who live at the monastery -- now surrounded by a new barbed-wire fence -- to imprison them at an unknown location.

An employee at a nearby hotel who asked not to be named told AFP on Wednesday that he could see armed police at the monastery, but had no knowledge of any clashes. Calls to the monastery were answered, but immediately cut off. Aba county officials and police did not answer repeated calls made by AFP. The situation at the influential monastery has deteriorated since the March 16 death of a monk called Phuntsog, who committed suicide by setting himself on fire on the third anniversary of anti-government unrest in the area. Rights groups said his death sparked demonstrations near Kirti monastery that were broken up by police, with monks arrested. There was also a protest in Dharamshala, the Indian hill town home of the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

The official Xinhua news agency, quoting a local government spokesman, later confirmed the self-immolation and death of the monk, who was said to be 24 years old. Rights groups put his age at 20 or 21. Resentment against Chinese rule runs deep in Tibetan regions of China. Many Tibetans are angry about what they view as increasing domination by China's majority Han ethnic group, and accuse the government of trying to dilute their culture. Tibetan resentment spilled over into violent demonstrations in March 2008 in Tibet's capital Lhasa, which then spread to neighbouring areas. Authorities have increased security in the region since then. China says Tibetan living standards have improved markedly in recent decades, pointing to billions of dollars spent on infrastructure and development projects. "It has escalated to this dangerous level because the authorities have strengthened the various measures and means of crackdown that led to the resentment and anguish in the first place," ICT's Kate Saunders said.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Apr 13, 2011
Most of the 170 Christians arrested in Beijing on the weekend have been released, except for a pastor and his wife, a church leader said.

The Protestant Christians, all members of the unregistered -- meaning not registered with the government -- Shouwang Church were picked up by police as they gathered to hold an outdoor service in a central public park.

Upwards of 1,000 members were gathering to worship but police moved into the crowd, picking out groups of people and taking them to waiting vans, witnesses said.

The church has no choice but to congregate outdoors and will remain defiant, pastor Jin Tianming said.

Until last month members took turns gathering for regular worship in a local restaurant, but the owner put pressure on them to stop the practice.

Jin would rather be in a building that the church had agreed to buy in November 2009, but the government put pressure on the landlord to hold off on the deal.

"We have two requirements," Jin said. "One is to return the keys of the building we bought and the other is to get permission from the government for indoor activities."

"If the government cannot give us the keys or give us the permission we need, we have no choice. We can only meet outdoors again."

Police questioned the members for many hours and asked them to sign letters stating that they would not attend any outdoor services. "Most of the members didn't sign the guarantee letters," Jin said.

Leaders of the church repeatedly said their gathering are not political but purely religious.

China officially has about 16 million Christians, but Christian activists say members of unregistered churches alone top 40 million.

The unregistered Shouwang Church is one of many so-called house churches, named as such because the small congregation could fit into a house, apartment or small building. But they also are unregistered with the Administration for Religious Affairs. This makes renting or buying premises and holding larger gatherings difficult because of government interference, church members say.

The exact legal status of the churches within China is open to debate. The government recognises them as a fact of civic life, but appears to make their life difficult. Detaining members of unregistered churches is not uncommon.

In March 2010, the official government newspaper China Daily published a report headlined "House Churches thrive in Beijing."

Beijing has "a growing number of, and an increasingly open attitude toward, house churches, according to members of these churches and experts on religion," the report said.

It also reported an activist saying the increase in house churches is due partly to lack of space at official churches, including the Three Self Patriot Movement, the China Christian Council and the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association.

But this week China Daily reported that Cai Kui, head of the Beijing Committee of Three-Self Patriotic Movement of Protestant Churches, made a plea to house church goers to contribute to "the national and social stability and unity."

"The love for the country does not conflict with the love for the religion," Cai said. "The code of ethics championed by Christianity coincides with that promoted by the Chinese government in many ways."

Last month, Shen Xuebin, vice chairman of the Three-Self Patriotic Movement, urged church members not to answer calls for participation in street gatherings planned every Sunday in public places across the country.

The China Daily report said Shen told Chinese Christians they "should love the country and protect social stability, instead of following calls of some anti-China forces who attempt to sabotage China."



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SINO DAILY
Most Christians detained in Beijing freed: group
Beijing (AFP) April 12, 2011
Almost all of the more than 150 Christians rounded up in Beijing when they tried to pray outdoors have been released, but church leaders remain under house arrest, a US-based rights group said Tuesday. On Sunday, Beijing police arrested at least 169 worshippers from the Shouwang "house church" - not formally recognised by the government - in Beijing's western Haidian district, China Aid sa ... read more







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