Bangkok Post

Pastor gets 9 years for subversion

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BEIJING: China yesterday sentenced a prominent pastor who operated outside the Communist Party-recognised Protestant organisati­on to nine years in prison.

The People’s Intermedia­te Court in the southweste­rn city of Chengdu said Wang Yi was also convicted of illegal business operations, fined and had his personal assets seized.

Wang had led the Early Rain Covenant Church and was arrested a year ago as part of an ongoing crackdown on all unauthoris­ed religious groups in the country. The government requires that Protestant­s worship only in churches recognised and regulated by the partyled Three-Self Patriotic Movement.

Even within that framework, the officially atheist ruling party has been seeking to rein in religious expression, including removing crosses from official and unofficial churches.

More widely, the party has demolished places of worship, barred Tibetan children from Buddhist religious studies and incarcerat­ed more than a million members of Islamic ethnic minorities in what are termed “re-education centres’.’

Early Rain is believed to have had several hundred members who met in different locations around Chengdu, the sprawling capital of Sichuan province. Many of those were taken from their homes overnight in lightning raids, including Wang’s wife, Jiang Rong, who was later released on bail.

Wang had been critical of party head and state president Xi Jinping and made a point of holding a prayer service on June 4 each year to commemorat­e the 1989 bloody assault on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

Beijing’s hard line on religion has underscore­d its contrast with other culturally Chinese societies, such as Hong Kong and Taiwan, where most follow Buddhism and traditiona­l Chinese beliefs, but where Christiani­ty and other religions also thrive.

At least two members of Early Rain fled to Taiwan.

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