Uzbekistan: Sunday worship service of la...

Email:

Uzbekistan: Sunday worship service of large church raided by five government agencies simultaneously

To

Email address:
Separate multiple addresses with a comma (,). Maximum of 10

From

Your name:
Your email address:
Security test:
Please enter the numbers that appear here in the box below.
refresh captcha
CAPTCHA Image
Security code:

Details provided here will never be used in any other context

Uzbekistan: Sunday worship service of large church raided by five government agencies simultaneously

Project(s): 57-776

Country: Uzbekistan

A morning service at the Tashkent City Church of Christ, one of the largest and most active churches in the Uzbek capital, was raided by several government agencies during morning worship on Sunday 16 May. Eight members of the church were arrested and have been punished with a mixture of fines and short prison sentences, although they do not believe they have broken any law. Meanwhile Uzbekistan’s Christians fear that the real aim of the raid is to close down the church.


First the police and National Security Service (NSS) secret police, followed by the Tax Inspectorate, Fire Brigade, and Sanitary-Epidemiological Service, converged on the church and stayed for five hours. The police had arrived without a warrant, but filmed everyone who was present, including the children’s classes, and confiscated literature, computers and money from the offering. They took passport details and car number-plates of the 500 adults present as well as the names and addresses of the children.

After the raid the church was officially sealed by the police, preventing the congregation from having further access, and the Fire Brigade cut off the electricity.

The church has been legally registered since 1999, has carefully followed official procedures, and has never before been accused of breaching any regulations.

Eight members of the church were held overnight and then instructed to attend a court hearing. Three people, including the assistant pastor, Artur Avanesyan, were sentenced to 15 days imprisonment and immediately detained. The five others were fined between five and 80 times the minimum monthly wage. The judge also ordered that the computers confiscated from the church should be handed over to the state.

Christians could not believe the unjust verdicts and the way the trials were conducted, one observer stating, "Everyone was shocked at the verdict because the defendants proved in court that they were innocent and there were so many violations of legal procedure.”

Christians are planning to appeal to the President of Uzbekistan and other authorities. There is grave concern that the true aim of the raid is to close the church down completely. A Christian from an unregistered church in Tashkent commented to Barnabas Fund how shocked she was to hear of such an attack on a legally registered church: “If they do that to the Church of Christ, what will become of the rest of us?”

Growing persecution of Protestants

Uzbekistan has a small Christian minority with Muslims making up about 77% of the population. In recent years there has been growing persecution of Protestant Christians, with raids on church services, short jail sentences and huge fines becoming commonplace. In October 2009 Christian leaders in Tashkent were given heavy fines and prison sentences for running a Christian children’s camp. In February 2010 13 members of a small church in Tashkent were fined and literature, including Bibles, was confiscated. In March 2010 a birthday party in Tashkent was raided and 10 women from a registered church were given hefty fines. In April 2010, in the southern Surkhandarya Region, two Protestants were given short prison sentences for engaging in evangelism. On 10 April 2010 a Christian youth conference was raided and those attending were taken to the police station, where the police photographed them and took their fingerprints. On 12 April 2010 a church in Tashkent, whose members had been providing food for homeless people, was raided.

Dr Patrick Sookhdeo, International Director of Barnabas Fund, comments:

Christians in Uzbekistan are amongst the most courageous anywhere in the world, as they boldly continue with their ministry and witness despite growing pressure and persecution. We at Barnabas Fund are privileged to assist and strengthen them in a number of practical ways. Please remember them in your prayers, and give as the Lord leads you.”

 

Donate Today

Barnabas Fund helps Christians in Uzbekistan, including new believers, through income-generation projects, medical needs, wells, winter feeding programmes, orphan care, Christian training conferences and seminars, support for full-time Christian workers and in other ways.

If you can help to strengthen our faithful, persecuted brothers and sisters in Uzbekistan, please click to donate online using our secure server (Please quote project reference 57-776 Uzbekistan General Fund).

If you prefer to telephone, dial: 0800 587 4006 from within the UK or +44 1672 565031 from outside the UK. Please quote project reference 57-776 Uzbekistan General Fund.

If you prefer to send a cheque by post: Click this link for the address of our regional office. Please quote project reference 57-776 Uzbekistan General Fund.

 

Please Pray:
  • Pray that the authorities will not try to close the Tashkent City Church of Christ but will let the church continue to function without further harassment.

  • Pray for encouragement for the congregation of the church, especially the children, so that they will stay strong in their faith despite the pressure they are being placed under and the threats made against them.

  • Pray for protection for the assistant pastor and two church members who are currently serving prison sentences.
Help Barnabas: Share this article

Email:

Uzbekistan: Sunday worship service of large church raided by five government agencies simultaneously

To

Email address:
Separate multiple addresses with a comma (,). Maximum of 10

From

Your name:
Your email address:
Security test:
Please enter the numbers that appear here in the box below.
refresh captcha
CAPTCHA Image
Security code:

Details provided here will never be used in any other context

christian, persecution, charity, church, persecuted, sookhdeo, Islam

Other articles

Follow Barnabas

or

receive news & appeal emails as they are published

From Twitter

From Twitter_icon
  • Sudan & S.Sudan agree 2 peace talks–but attacks continue "Khartoum is bombing civilian targets, killing women/children" http://t.co/ImZPDfxd Fri, May 2012 16:25

  • Kuwait's ruler blocks Islamist parliament's bid to impose sharia law http://t.co/RQOx3Ar7 Fri, May 2012 15:59

  • "The funds provided by Barnabas have been a big source of help and a glimpse of hope" for needy Christians in Syria http://t.co/hPehUw4y Thu, May 2012 16:50

  • Kuwaiti parliament approves death penalty for blasphemy "we need this legislation - incidents of cursing God have risen http://t.co/ay3seTcP Thu, May 2012 16:07

  • Nigerian #Christians undeterred by attacks "we must have faith in God.This is our home.This is where we should worship" http://t.co/CnqS64Hm Wed, May 2012 16:59

Daily prayer

Daily prayer_icon
  • The Cuban authorities have also been clamping down hard on Christian human rights activists. On 4 March, Caridad Caballero Batista and her husband Esteban Sade Suarez were detained on their way to church, mistreated and held in a poorly ventilated, mosquito-infested cell for three hours. Since the start of the year they have been blocked, and sometimes violently prevented, from attending Christian activities. Other Christian activists have also been arrested or prevented from attending worship services. Give thanks that the churches in Cuba are growing, and pray that they may be strong in the Lord (Ephesians 6:10). Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed 7 hours ago

  • Threats, beatings, arrests and fines: these are all penalties suffered by Cuban pastors in a recent crackdown by the authorities. One church leader, from Moa, sustained brain damage in a brutal assault on 6 February; it is thought he was targeted because he challenged the confiscation of a vehicle owned by the church. In another incident, on 25 February, four leaders were detained in Bayamo while sharing the Gospel at the local bus station. One of them was so badly beaten that he required hospital treatment. In Havana a pastor has been repeatedly fined huge sums because his church is not registered, while another has faced threats of violence because of his congregation’s outreach to people on the margins of society. Pray for these leaders as they recover from their ordeal, and for an end to the official harassment. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Sun, May 2012 00:00

  • Unregistered churches in Kazakhstan can face intense harassment from the authorities. On 8 February Aleksei Asetov, a father of ten, was given a fine equivalent to about 18 months earnings of an average wage for leading a small unregistered church that meets in his home in Ekibastuz in Pavlodar Region. His property was raided and Christian literature seized, and he was convicted of carrying out banned religious activity. He is the fourth Christian known to have been fined since the new Religion Law came into force. Pray that Christians will stand firm in their faith and show the love of Christ to those who persecute them. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Sat, May 2012 00:00

  • “The activity of small religious groups in the territory of Kazakhstan is now banned since there is no such form of religious association of citizens.” A senior religious affairs official in Kazakhstan bluntly declared that under the new Religion Law that came into force in October 2011, religious associations with fewer than 50 members must either re-register with more than 50 people or stop their activities. A number of churches from a range of Christian denominations have already been stripped of their registration, and no rules have yet been drawn up to enable them to re-register, even if they have enough members to do so. Pray that this repressive new law will be enforced less strictly and will eventually be repealed. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Fri, May 2012 00:00

  • The new president of Russia, Vladimir Putin, has promised to make the protection of repressed Christians in foreign countries one of his foreign policy priorities. During the presidential election he met with a group of church leaders in Moscow on 8 February, who told him that Christians were suffering persecution all over the world, with one Christian dying for his or her faith every five minutes. When they asked him to give attention to this problem, he replied, “This is how it will be, have no doubt.” Give thanks for this undertaking, and pray that the president will honour it. Subscribe to the prayer points rss feed Thu, May 2012 00:00

© Barnabas Fund 1997 - 2012 All rights reserved. Barnabas Fund Australia Limited, a Company Limited by Guarantee – ABN: 70 005 572 485
Barnabas Fund & Barnabas Aid are registered trade marks