Advanced Search

Eritrea Forcing Christian Ministers into Military Camps

By
Christian Post Reporter
Thu, Apr. 24 2008 12:25 PM ET
[-]Text[+]
E-mail Print RSS More on Topic AddThis Button

The Eritrean government is reportedly sending some leaders of the Eritrean Orthodox Church to military training camps, a persecution watchdog group reported.

On Thursday, a small number of church priests and deacons were given replacement identity cards, exempting them from military training, but the majority of church leaders did not receive the updated identity cards and are now required to go to military training camps, according to International Christian Concern.

The largest Eritrean Orthodox Church in the country, St. Mary, is located in capital city Asmara. St. Mary had 96 ministers, but only 10 of them were issued IDs that exempted them from military training.

Similarly, in rural areas, where most Orthodox churches are located, the maximum number of priests and deacons allowed to serve in any church is 10. The rest are expected to report for military service if they are under the age of 50.

Besides churches, the new campaign also forces many in Orthodox monasteries to be conscripted into the army.

In 2006, the Eritrean government had informed churches of its decision to rescind a long-standing exemption of clerics from compulsory military service.

The Roman Catholic Church in Eritrea was the only church to express strong public opposition to the unprecedented action.

In contrast, top leaders of the Eritrean Orthodox Church, who were hand-picked by the government, readily agreed to the new policy. As a result, officials are now forcibly recruiting church ministers into military service on a wide scale.

The persecution of the Orthodox Church is a relatively new move by the Eritrean government. Previously, officials focused crackdown efforts on “unregistered churches,” which are mainly evangelical.

But over the last two years, the government has tightened its grip on the Eritrean Orthodox Church, the oldest and most established religious institution in the country.

His Holiness Patriarch Abune Antonios, the head of the Eritrean Orthodox Church, has been under house arrest since January 2006 after he openly criticized the government’s interference in church affairs. The government also responded by replacing him with a hand-picked pontiff.

Almost 45 percent of the Eritrean population belongs to the Eritrean Orthodox Church.

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has for three straight years listed Eritrea under “Countries of Particular Concern” (CPCs) – the label given to the worst religious freedom violators.

It is estimated that some 2,000 Christians are currently detained without trial or charge in Eritrea with some in metal containers and others routinely tortured.

BACK TO TOP Print E-mail More on Topic AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Comments

Most recent comments
gavulav
  • Tue Apr 29, 2008 5:27 pm
  • : 2
  • : 0
  • Flag
In the Old Testament, there are numerous times when God delivered punishment, usually death or persecution, on the nation of Israel, on families and also on individuals because they were guilty of some particularly repugnant sin and disobedience. In the light of these, I believe we should expect that God will act in a similar fashion should similar sinful situations arise today.

But having said that, I also believe that God uses adversity, trials and persecution today to place his people in situations where they are able to reach the lost and to bring them back to him.
ender
  • Tue Apr 29, 2008 3:05 am
  • : 1
  • : 1
  • Flag
This may well be a way for the ministers to bring others to God. By sharing the hardships usually incurred during military training and preaching the word of God, undoubtedly many will come to Christ.
hautechick
  • Sat Apr 26, 2008 6:50 pm
  • : 0
  • : 1
  • Flag
I'll illustrate my response to this article by a comparison quote from a well known megachrurch pastor who said...
"All hurricanes are acts of God, because God controls the heavens. I believe that New Orleans had a level of sin that was offensive to God, and they are - were recipients of the judgment of God for that." Pastor John Hagee

Well it looks like in Eritrea, God has had his fill of CHRISTIANS who have reached their level of SIN- God's rounding them up and detaining them in camps.
Please help us to monitor our message boards by flagging Abusive, Spam, Offensive, Illegal, Racist or Libellous Posts.

Comment on this story

ID Password
Submit Don't have a Christian Post ID?Signing up is easy. Click Here