Large church in Xuzhou banned in latest Chinese attack on unofficial congregations

8 July 2019

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Chinese authorities have banned a major unregistered church from operating in the city of Xuzhou city in the eastern province of Jiangsu.

The ban on Dao En Presbyterian Church comes after an onslaught of harassment by the local religious affairs department in 2018.

Three of its church buildings have been closed, and the police are pressuring landlords to stop renting properties to the church.

Some churches are being banned and others are having their crosses removed as authorities' crackdown on religious freedom continues
Some churches are being banned and others are having their crosses removed as authorities' crackdown on religious freedom continues [Image credit: ChinaAid]

Earlier this year, on 10 February, also in the province of Jiangsu​, authorities removed a cross from a 3,000-strong registered Christian church in Chengdong.

The past year has seen an intensification of regional authorities clamping down mainly against unofficial congregations, known as “house churches” in China. One of the most notable shutdowns was when more than 100 members of Early Rain Covenant Church were arrested in coordinated police action on 9 December 2018. As of 4 July 2019, its pastor, Wang Yi, and four other members remained in detention.

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