2014: A year of rising hostility toward Christians
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST and the ASSIST News Service
LAKE FOREST, CA (ANS)
-- While the world's eyes were riveted to Syria and Iraq in 2014, life
for Christians worsened even more profoundly in Africa, according to an
annual report on religious freedom.
According to World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
the situation deteriorated most rapidly in sub-Saharan Africa, in
countries where Islamic extremism is the main source of pressure upon
Christians, according to the 2015 World Watch List, released Jan. 7 by
Open Doors International, a charity that supports Christians who face
hostilities because of their faith.
The list, published annually
since 1993, ranks the 50 countries considered to be most hostile to
Christians during the 12 months ending Oct. 31, 2014. It surveys
religious freedom for Christians in five areas of life: private; family;
community; national; and the church. It also measures violence against
Christians, and 2014 was a very violent year.
According to Open Doors, the
4,344 Christians reported to have been killed during the 12-month period
are more than double the 2,123 killed in 2013, and more than triple the
1,201 killed the year before that. The majority of the deaths in the
most recent period occurred in Nigeria, where 2,484 people were killed,
and in Central African Republic, where 1,088 people were killed.
"Overall, the survey scores
assigned to the 50 countries rose by nearly 10 percent compared to the
2014 scores, indicating a generally rising tide of antagonism toward
Christians in the 50 countries most hostile to believers," said World
Watch Monitor.
"The report also noted a
resurgence of anti-Christian hostility in parts of Asia and Latin
America, two regions where conditions had been comparatively favorable
in previous years.
"And for the first time in three years, Mexico is back on the list, at No. 38."
The main engine: Islamic extremism
In 40 of the 50 countries on the
World Watch List, WWL, Open Doors said "Islamic extremism" was a
primary source of pressure on Christian life.
"It is fair to say that Islamic extremism has two global centers of gravity. One in the Arab Middle East, but the other is in sub-Saharan Africa, and even Christian majority states are experiencing unprecedented levels of exclusion, discrimination, and even violence," wrote Ron Boyd-MacMillan, director of strategic trends and research for Open Doors International, in a report supplementing the World Watch List.
"It is fair to say that Islamic extremism has two global centers of gravity. One in the Arab Middle East, but the other is in sub-Saharan Africa, and even Christian majority states are experiencing unprecedented levels of exclusion, discrimination, and even violence," wrote Ron Boyd-MacMillan, director of strategic trends and research for Open Doors International, in a report supplementing the World Watch List.
Though violence against
Christians made headlines throughout 2014, it was largely the same in
most countries, with the exception of Iraq, Syria and Nigeria, according
to the report. Instead, pressure on Christians increased mostly in less
obvious ways: being shunned by family; losing a job and rejection
within the community for faith related reasons. Such "squeeze" tactics,
the report said, are especially hard on former Muslims who have embraced
Christianity.
"It's important to understand this extremism is not only from the
violent jihadists like the militant Islamist group Boko Haram, but
Islamists who seek to take over cultures by stealth," Boyd-McMillan
wrote.Influence of 'Islamic State'
Daily life for Christians in most of the top 50 countries became more difficult during the past year, but the situation especially deteriorated in the northern provinces of Nigeria, where the Boko Haram insurgency has followed the lead of the so-called "Islamic State" and proclaimed a caliphate of its own. (I was born in this part of Nigeria of British missionary parents.)
Ranking No. 10 on the World Watch List, Nigeria's levels of pressure and violence against Christians are at a record high.
In April, the abduction of the
276 school girls in the Borno State village of Chibok commanded
worldwide attention, but the mass abduction was only part of a wider
anti-Christian front, one which killed nearly 2,500 Christians across
the country. Open Doors said the links between al-Qaeda in the Maghreb
and Boko Haram, as well as with other Islamic terrorist groups in the
region, make it likely the church will suffer more violent persecution
in the near future. The charity said violence from Hausa-Fulani Muslim
herdsmen in the country's Middle Belt region is expected to add to the
threat, as is pre-election violence later this year.
Tiffany Lynch, a policy analyst
for the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, an advisory
body to Congress, drew a distinction between the apparent expansionist
ambitions of Islamic State and the six-year-old Boko Haram uprising in
Nigeria.
"ISIL fits in with greater
national security concerns in the Middle East, whereas Boko Haram is a
domestic Islamic insurgency with regional concerns," said Lynch, using a
common name for Islamic State, in an email to World Watch Monitor.
"More importantly, ISIL attacks on Christians and other non-Muslims are
part of a broader question about the future of these small religious
communities in the region and their homeland."
According to Open Doors,
al-Shabaab, a Somalia-based militant Islamist group affiliated with
al-Qaeda, and other extremist movements in Eastern Africa also are
drawing inspiration from the tactics of Islamic State.
Asia increasingly difficult; North Korea still No.1
With the exception of North
Korea, which has been No. 1 on the World Watch List since its inception,
Open Doors had been reporting improving conditions for Christians in
the Far East in recent years.
The trend reversed course in 2014, when every country on the list but Laos and Sri Lanka received a higher persecution score. China, India and Malaysia registered the largest increases. Twelve countries from East Asia and the Far East are among the top 50.
The trend reversed course in 2014, when every country on the list but Laos and Sri Lanka received a higher persecution score. China, India and Malaysia registered the largest increases. Twelve countries from East Asia and the Far East are among the top 50.
Open Doors said some fundamentalist Hindu and Buddhist leaders feel threatened by the growth of Christianity.
The score assigned to No. 21
India is the highest ever. "The season of impunity for anti-Christian
action in India has started since the world's largest democracy elected a
Hindu extremist Prime Minister who has declared open season on
Christians," Open Doors said.
In China, which rose to No. 29,
scores of churches were attacked, with some being destroyed and about
300 crosses being removed. Open Doors said the fact that the communist
government is still undecided about how to deal with the church is good
news because it suggests a debate about church liberties is happening
within the Chinese government.
Latin America
Mexico is the highest entrant on
the WWL this year at No. 38. The report said the growth of organized
crime in the country, as well as better reporting of anti-Christian
violence, helps to explain the country's return to the list. The sources
of persecution are complex in the predominantly Christian country. Open
Doors said weak states allow local forces, such as drug traffickers, to
hold sway. When Christians stand against the trade, they are targeted.
The World Watch List, the only annual global survey of Christian
religious freedom, ranks countries using eight primary "persecution
engines" to explain why the Christian community becomes especially
targeted in certain circumstances.
The "engines" are not always
specifically anti-Christian as they include forces such as "dictatorial
paranoia" and "organized corruption," which sweeps up people of all
faiths.
"Dictatorial paranoia is the
second-most prevalent force making life difficult for Christians, and is
a primary source of persecution in 13 countries, including North Korea,
according to the list. North Korean citizens who are discovered to be
Christian face long prison terms or execution," continued World Watch
Monitor.
"Against the backdrop of media
coverage of violence and beheadings in the Middle East, Open Doors said
new co-operative relationships being forged between Muslims and
Christians could have long term benefits. The charity said the crisis is
forging a new level of inter-faith respect as pressured minorities have
been forced to live and work together."
For more information, please go to https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/2015/01/3588537
January 8, 2015
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