Eritrean church leaders still in jail 12 years later
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
According to World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
the Eritrean government outlawed worship outside of Islam and the
Orthodox, Evangelical Lutheran and Roman Catholic Church in 2002,
driving all other Christian churches underground as they faced varying
degrees of restrictions and attacks. Since then, thousands of Christians
have been arrested and incarcerated without benefitting from a legal
process.
Among
them are a number of prominent church leaders arrested in 2004, who
remain incarcerated today, almost 12 years later. World Watch Monitor
spoke with the family of one of these prisoners.
For
years following Naigzhi’s arrest, his wife and three children (names
withheld to protect their identity) waited for his release. In 2013, his
wife received credible information that the government wanted to arrest
her and the children, so she decided to flee.
As
World Watch Monitor reported last year, the journey out of Eritrea is
fraught with danger. Movement in Eritrea is heavily controlled through
an internal travel-pass system and checkpoints; anyone trying to cross
the border can be shot on sight.
“If
you make it past those first two hurdles, you reach the desert, exposed
to the unforgiving elements and lawless human traffickers. Whatever
destination you aim for after that could see you either crossing the
Mediterranean on a rickety boat or dodging deportation from African
countries with diplomatic and ideological ties to the Eritrean
government,” said their story.
World
Watch Monitor cannot divulge the details of the Naigzhi family’s
journey, nor where they ended up, but today they are settled in a new
country, where they have been granted asylum.
“We
feel safer here,” said Naigzhi’s wife. “We are able to freely serve
God. I am also happy because the children are in a good school.”
But
their 19-year-old daughter misses home. “Ever since we left our
country, things have dramatically changed in a way we didn’t know they
would. I knew the moment we left that we would have an uphill battle
until we are able one day to go back home again. And it was all true.”
Naigzhi’s wife added: “I miss my husband dearly. It is very lonely for me.”
The other boy, 17, last saw his father when he was five and confessed to also feeling homesick.
“I miss home, I miss my friends, and I miss our house,” he said.
“It is difficult, but we hold on to Jesus,” said Naigzhi’s wife.
Her
daughter added: “We learnt that having a ‘bed-of-roses’ kind of life on
earth is not actually God’s number one plan for us, but that everything
we face in this world shapes our spirits into the beautiful spirit the
Lord wishes to see in us. I am happy in every way and most especially to
be the daughter of the Most High God. I am also happy to be the
daughter of a prisoner for Christ. He is the best dad ever! God will
make things perfect one day, and I trust Him with all my heart. He is
faithful to keep His word.”
Eritrea
is No. 3 on Open Doors’ 2016 World Watch List, which ranks the 50
countries in which it is most difficult to live as a Christian. No one
knows for certain how many Christians remain in the elaborate network of
incarceration centers in Eritrea. Although there seems to have been a
lull in arrests, pressure remains high on Christians and on society in
general. Thousands are still intent on fleeing the country, the majority
aiming for Europe. Hundreds have died trying.
Incarcerated church leaders:
Ogbamichael Teklehaimanot,
senior pastor of the Kale Hiwot Church, who was arrested for
participating in a Protestant wedding ceremony in Barentu on January, 9,
2005. Taken to Asmara Police Station No. 5, then subjected to 10 months
of solitary confinement and hard labour at Sawa military camp. Released
after six years, then re-arrested six months later, after a fleeing
church member, who was being monitored, called him. Now back in prison
in Barentu, where he has been for 11 years in total.
Kidane Weldou,
the senior pastor of the Full Gospel Church and member of the executive
committee of Gideons International in Eritrea. When his vehicle was
found abandoned in 2005, his wife and four children assumed he had been
arrested. Believed to be in Wongel Mermera prison.
Haile Naigzhi,
leader of Eritrea’s Full Gospel Church, who was arrested at his home
during the early hours of May, 23, 2004, and taken to Police Station #1
in Asmara.
Million Gebreselasie, who is an anesthetist and pastor of Massawa Rhema Church, was arrested on June, 3, 2004, five days after another pastor, Tesfasion Hagos
(who has since been released and granted asylum in another country),
visited his church and home. Unmarried, he was arrested at a police
checkpoint just before entering Asmara, as he was returning Pastor
Hagos’ belongings to his home. Taken to the 2nd Police Station, where he
was held for about two months, before being relocated to Wongel
Mermera, where he remains.
Futsum Gebrenegus,
Eritrea’s only psychiatrist, who also served as an Orthodox priest. He
was arrested in Nov. 2004 for allegedly being involved in the renewal
movement within the Orthodox Church.
Gebremedhin Gebregiorsis,
an expert theologian and Orthodox priest also arrested in Nov. 2004 for
allegedly being involved in the renewal movement within the Orthodox
Church.
Tekleab Menghisteab,
a doctor and Orthodox priest who was also arrested in Nov. 2004 for
alleged involvement in the renewal movement within the Orthodox Church.
Photo
captions: 1) Eritreans protest torture of Christians. 2) Haile Naigzhi.
(Photo: World Watch Monitor.) 3) An aid worker speaks to Eritrean
migrants disembarking from the Italian military ship Sfinge in the port
of Augusta, on the eastern coast of Sicily. (Photo: Agence
France-Presse/Getty Images ). 4) Patriarch Abune Antonios. (Photo: World
Watch Monitor). 5) Kiflu Gebremeskel. 6) Dan Wooding recording his
radio show. (Photo: OC Register).
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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