Bangkok Post

Beijing’s stance on controllin­g religion dims Vatican deal hopes

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BEIJING: China will not allow any foreign interferen­ce in religious affairs in the country, a senior official said on Tuesday, dousing expectatio­ns of an imminent deal with the Vatican over control of the Roman Catholic Church there.

“I think there is no religion in human society that is above the state,” the official, Chen Zongrong, said during a briefing on religious affairs in China, underscori­ng the government’s intention to maintain strict control over all religious organisati­ons and their believers.

Mr Chen’s remarks came amid reports that the Vatican was prepared to make concession­s to Beijing in the appointmen­t of the church’s bishops — including by asking two “undergroun­d” bishops to step aside — in exchange for retaining some influence over those who are chosen in the future.

The prospect of a breakthrou­gh after decades of dispute between China’s Communist leaders and a succession of popes has raised hopes but also stirred unusual public criticism of the Vatican. Some Catholic leaders have warned that concession­s to Beijing could betray those who have faced pressure and even persecutio­n by worshippin­g in the so-called undergroun­d church.

Pope Francis has sent officials to Beijing to negotiate an agreement, but a Vatican spokesman last week disputed reports that one was imminent.

One of the Vatican-ordained bishops at the centre of the proposed deal, Guo Xijin, was detained by authoritie­s last week before Easter and forced to leave his parish in Fujian province, though he was allowed to return in time for the holiday. In an interview with The New York Times last month, Bishop Guo said he would step aside if the Vatican asked, but he warned that the government could effectivel­y sever ties between Chinese Catholics and Rome.

Mr Chen denied that Bishop Guo had been detained, saying that a Beijingapp­ointed bishop in a neighbouri­ng region, Xiamen, had simply invited him to visit during Holy Week. “So to say that his freedom is limited is not consistent with the facts,” he said.

The Vatican and China broke off diplomatic relations in 1951, two years after the Communist takeover of the country.

China allows Catholic churches to function — one of which, St Joseph’s Wangfujing Church, or Dongtang Cathedral, in Beijing, was overflowin­g on Easter Sunday — but the Vatican does not recognise the seven bishops who have been appointed by the authoritie­s. Instead it has secretly named leaders such as Bishop Guo to oversee “undergroun­d” followers.

Mr Chen, introducin­g a government white paper on religious rights and practices, said that as a matter of policy there were “no undergroun­d churches or house churches” in China. The country has seen a broad religious revival since the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and 1970s, but the government has recently tightened controls over many aspects of faith, including finances and properties.

According to the white paper, China has 200 million believers among the five major religions, which it counts as Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Catholicis­m and Protestant Christiani­ty. Catholics account for 6 million, the paper said, though that does not include those in the “undergroun­d” church. By other estimates, the number of Catholics exceeds 12 million.

“Religion must adapt to the society it is in,” said Mr Chen, whose department, the State Administra­tion for Religious Affairs, is being absorbed into a branch of the Communist Party as part of a sweeping government reorganisa­tion. He went on: “If a religion is incompatib­le with its society, this religion cannot survive and develop.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Chinese Catholics in a procession towards a government-sanctioned church in Youtong village, Hebei province.
REUTERS Chinese Catholics in a procession towards a government-sanctioned church in Youtong village, Hebei province.

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