North Korea Remains Top Persecutor
February 3, 2009
Posted by
The Voice of the Martyrs
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Our friends at Open Doors have released their top persecutors list and North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Iran top the list.
SANTA ANA, Calif., Feb. 3 /Christian Newswire/
-- The oppressive, isolated country of North Korea headed by dictator
Kim Jong Il retains its grip as the worst persecutor of Christians in
the world.
According to Open Doors' 2008 World
Watch List released today, North Korea is ranked No. 1 for the seventh
year in a row. Christians are persecuted constantly under the communist
government, which denies human rights to its citizens.
The Wahhabi kingdom of Saudi Arabia is No. 2 and Iran No. 3. Both countries are ruled by Shariah law.
Afghanistan, Somalia and the Maldives
take the fourth, fifth and sixth positions, respectively. Afghanistan
moved up three spots on the list this year as a result of increased
pressure from the Taliban movement during 2008. Yemen is No. 7, Laos
No. 8, Eritrea No. 9 and Uzbekistan No. 10.
Somalia and Eritrea are new countries
to the top 10 list. In Somalia, the number of incidents against
Christians increased dramatically in 2008, explaining its rise to No. 5
from No. 12 in 2007. For Eritrea, there was no major change in the lack
of religious freedom for Christians. Around 3,000 Christians are being
held in Eritrean prisons.
China and Bhutan dropped out of the top 10 with China now No. 12 and Bhutan No. 11. Last year China was No. 10 and Bhutan No. 5.
Islam is the majority religion in
seven of the top 10 countries: Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan,
Somalia, Maldives, Yemen and Uzbekistan. Two countries have communist
governments: North Korea and Laos. Eritrea is the only dictatorial
country in the 10 highest countries on the list.
The World Watch List is compiled from
a specially-designed questionnaire of 50 questions covering various
aspects of religious freedom. A point value is assigned depending on
how each question is answered. The total number of points per country
determines its position on the World Watch List of countries that are
the worst persecutors of Christians.
"It is certainly not a shock that
North Korea is No. 1 on the list of countries where Christians face the
worst persecution," says Carl Moeller, President/CEO of Open Doors USA.
"There is no other country in the world where Christians are persecuted
in such a horrible and systematic manner.
"I encourage you to join our on-going
prayer campaign for North Korea and to plug in to the many
opportunities Open Doors offers to advocate for the oppressed believers
there during North Korea Freedom Week April 25-May 2."
The status of religious freedom for
Christians deteriorated in 2008 in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan,
Somalia, Pakistan (No. 13), Iraq (No. 16), Mauritania (No. 18), Algeria
(No. 19), India (No. 22), Northern Nigeria (26), Indonesia (No. 41),
Bangladesh (No. 43) and Kazakhstan (No. 50 and new on the top 50 list).
Persecution continues unabated in
Saudi Arabia. Five months after the daughter of a member of Saudi
Arabia's religious police was killed for writing online about her faith
in Christ, Saudi authorities reportedly arrested a 28-year-old
Christian man for describing his conversion and criticizing the
kingdom's judiciary on his Website, according to Compass Direct News.
Saudi police arrested Hamoud Bin Saleh on Jan. 13 "because of his
opinions and his testimony that he had converted from Islam to
Christianity," according to the Arabic Network for Human Rights
Information.
In Iran, a major crackdown on house
churches occurred and a large number of Christians were arrested,
marking 2008 as one of the toughest years regarding Christian
persecution since the Islamic Revolution of 1979. In Afghanistan, a
Western Christian aid worker was killed because, according to the
Taliban, she was spreading Christianity in Afghanistan which is
prohibited by law in the country. In Somalia, Open Doors received
reports of at least 10 Christians killed for their faith in 2008 and
several others kidnapped and raped. Pressure on the Christian minority
in Pakistan continued unabated.
Iraq's Christian minority faced a
year full of violence in 2008. Churches were attacked or damaged by
bombs, Christians received death threats and several Christians were
murdered, abused and/or kidnapped.
For years India has ranked No. 30 on
Open Doors' persecution index. This year it moved to No. 22 primarily
because in the third quarter of 2008 there was the worst outbreak of
religious violence on record for Christians in India, especially in the
state of Orissa. The number of incidents regarding arrests, physical
harassment, abductions and church attacks remained high all over India.
"The escalation of violence against
Christians in India in 2008 is very troubling," says Moeller. "Please
pray for believers there."
In a major positive development,
fewer believers were harassed in Vietnam this year. As a result it fell
to No. 23. Last year it was ranked No. 17 and in 2006 it was No. 8.
Open Doors recorded fewer reports of persecution of Christians in
Colombia this year. As a result, this long-time World Watch List
country fell off the list.