Saudi Arabia Arrests 53 Ethiopian Christians at Private Worship Service
By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service
SAUDI ARABIA
(ANS) -- Saudi authorities on Feb. 8
arrested 53 Ethiopian Christians, mostly women, who were attending a
worship service in the private, rented home of an Ethiopian believer in
Dammam, the capital of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.
That's according to a news release from the World Evangelical
Alliance's Religious Liberty Commission (WEA-RLC) which said it learned
this from sources inside the Arab kingdom.
The Christians - 46 women and six men including three church leaders -
were arrested at about 10 a.m. last Friday, a close relative of one of
those arrested told WEA-RLC.
The three church leaders - two of them women - were produced in
an Islamic court in Dammam the same day when authorities alleged they
were converting Muslims to Christianity, the source added.
WEA-RLC said authorities are likely to release two of the Ethiopian
Christians who have residential permits on Monday, and the others are
expected to be deported.
Dammam, a center for petroleum and natural gas and all commerce in the
eastern parts of the kingdom, is a large metropolitan, industrial area
and a major seaport.
However, WEA-RLC said, religious freedom is not granted to the
numerous visitors or expats in the region, like elsewhere in the nation.
A Saudi girl who embraced Christianity and fled Dammam in Sept. 2012
was granted asylum in Sweden last month, according to Al-Yaum newspaper.
WEA-RLC said in Dec. 2011, Saudi authorities arrested 35 Ethiopian
Christians, 29 of them women, for "illicit mingling," after police
arrested them when they raided a private prayer gathering in Jeddah. Of
those arrested 29 were women, who were subjected to arbitrary body
cavity searches in custody, according to Human Rights Watch.
"We call on Saudi authorities to treat all those arrested with dignity,
and release them immediately as there is apparently no evidence for any
offense against them," Godfrey Yogarajah, WEA-RLC executive director,
said in the news release.
He added, "Arrest of believers for peacefully gathering for
worship goes against the spirit of Saudi Arabia's promotion of
inter-religious dialogue in international (forums)."
More than 10 years since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United
States, the Saudi government has failed to implement a number of
promised reforms related to promoting freedom of thought, conscience,
and religion or belief, noted the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom in its 2012 annual report.
"The Saudi government persists in banning all forms of public religious
expression other than that of the government's own interpretation of one
school of Sunni Islam; prohibits churches, synagogues, temples, and
other non-Muslim places of worship; uses in its schools and posts online
state textbooks that continue to espouse intolerance and incite
violence; and periodically interferes with private religious practice,"
WEA-RLC stated the report said.
The Religious Liberty Commission monitors he religious liberty
situation in more than 100 nations, defending persecuted Christians,
informs the global church, challenges the Church to pray (www.idop.org) and gives assistance to the suffering.
For more go to www.worldevangelicals.org/commissions/rlc.
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