Iranian and Afghan Christian converts face deportation from Germany after ‘clueless’ questioning
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
BERLIN, GERMANY (ANS – January 22, 2017)
-- Germany’s Ministry for Immigration and Refugees (BAMF) is rejecting
many applications for asylum from Iranian and Afghan converts from Islam
to Christianity, following “kangaroo court”-style hearings, according
to a Berlin pastor.
In a story, World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
says that the Rev. Gottfried Martens, who has baptized more than 1,000
former Muslims, in a letter to supporters of his ministry, accused the
“almost exclusively Muslim translators” in the hearings of deliberately
falsely translating the converts’ responses to jeopardize their
applications.
Martens,
pastor of the Lutheran Dreieinigkeits Gemeinde (Trinity Community),
criticized the ways in which officials investigated whether a conversion
was genuine. “Questions are put such as the names of the two sons in
the parable of the Prodigal Son, or what Martin Luther died of, or the
occasion of Queen Margarethe of Denmark’s recent visit to Wittenberg,”
he said.
World
Watch Monitor goes on to say that in some hearings, Martens said asylum
applicants “repeatedly undergo being mocked and laughed at when they
relate how it is important to them that Jesus Christ died for their sins
on the Cross.”
Many
German Ministry officials “are manifestly clueless about the situation
of Christians in Iran and Afghanistan, and, worse yet, they are utterly
clueless concerning questions relating to the Christian faith,” Martens
continued.
Converts
from Islam to Christianity in countries such as Iran, Pakistan and
Afghanistan face rejection by their communities and in some cases death
threats, since they have, in the eyes of Islam, committed the ultimate
treachery of apostasy.
Separately,
Martens criticized the Catholic Church and the Protestant EKD Church,
which had opposed housing Christian and Muslim refugees separately –
because doing so might suggest religions could not coexist peacefully.
Heinrich Bedford-Strohm, Chairman of the Council of Protestant Churches,
said he would meet with politicians to express concern about the way
that Iranian and Afghan converts are being treated.
In addition, on Monday (January 9th) Mitteldeutsche Kirchenzeitungen
reported Martens as saying: “I have the impression, however, that the
BAMF now has given out orders to judge converts particularly severely.”
A
lawyer from the city of Nuremberg said he would hold workshops in
different cities across Germany for volunteers who help converts seeking
asylum, to enable them to navigate through the questioning by the
authorities.
A
spokesman for the German base of the global Christian charity Open
Doors said: “These Christians have either fled from their home countries
because of their newfound faith and the persecution they had to face
because of it, or have come to believe in Jesus Christ after fleeing to
Germany.
“Sending
them back to their countries of origin is completely irresponsible in
view of the situation for Christian converts in places like Iran or
Afghanistan, because it is truly a matter of life and death. Open Doors
demands an immediate revision of the policy of the BAMF in view of their
dealing with converts.”
Open
Doors Germany recommended in a report in October that converts be given
Christian translators and, if they had suffered attacks, separate
accommodation.
These
criticisms echo those made in 2016 of the questioning faced by
Christian asylum seekers in the UK. However, World Watch Monitor says
that it understands that, since mid-2016, UK Home Office interviews have
changed the focus from quiz-like general knowledge questions (which an
asylum seeker may or may not even understand, let alone happen to know
the answer to) to questions such as their experiences of living in their
own country and how and why they came to convert to Christianity. The
UK Home Office published its response to the criticisms in Sept 2016.
Photo
captions: 1) An Iranian convert to Christianity attends a course in
Berlin preparing him for baptism. (AFP/Clemens Bilan). 2) Refugees
lining up to be baptized in Germany.3) Dan Wooding.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 76, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria, West Africa, of
British missionary parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who then worked
with the Sudan Interior Mission, now known as SIM. He now lives in
Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he has been married for
more than 53 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter, and six
grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is the founder/president of
the ASSIST News Service (ANS), and is also the author or co-author of
some 45 books. He has a weekly radio show and two TV programs all based
in Southern California.
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