Time: China Has Imprisoned the Pastor of Its Largest Official Church

Time
By Rishi Iyengar

Jan. 31, 2016

Gu Yuese is the highest-ranking Christian leader detained since China’s infamous Cultural Revolution

Authorities in China have detained the pastor of the country’s largest official Protestant church, who publicly objected to a government drive to demolish crosses on church buildings, in what rights groups say is part of a larger crackdown on religious freedom in the communist nation.

Pastor Gu Yuese, also known as Joseph Gu, was placed under “residential surveillance in a designated location” — the official term for facilities known more commonly as “black jails” — in the city of Hangzhou last Thursday, according to U.S.-based Christian rights group China Aid.

A local resident rides a bicycle past a church in Xiaoshan, a
commercial suburb of Hangzhou, the capital of China’s
Zhejiang province, on Dec. 21, 2006
Lang Lang—Reuters

Gu, who headed Hangzhou’s prominent Chongyi Church, was reportedly removed from his post by China’s Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM), the Chinese Communist Party–sanctioned authority that regulates churches, 10 days prior to his detention. He had been vocal in his opposition to the government’s destruction of crosses atop church buildings in China’s Christian-dominated eastern province of Zhejiang, a campaign that began in 2014.

“His arrest marks a major escalation in the crackdown against those who oppose the forced demolition of crosses,” Bob Fu, president and founder of China Aid, said in a statement. “He will be the highest-ranking national church leader arrested since the Cultural Revolution.”

A TSPM official, however, refuted reports of Gu’s detention when contacted by Radio Free Asia, claiming that the Christian leader was simply “helping with an investigation.”

The pastor’s wife Zhou Lianmei has also gone missing, and family members believe she has been taken into custody as well.

Gu’s imprisonment has reportedly caused a wave of alarm across China’s evangelical community, with growing fears that the authoritarian government’s increasing proclivity to silence dissenting voices has extended to the religious sphere.

“This is really quite an escalation,” Fu told the Christian Science Monitor. “It sends a signal to silence any potential future dissenting voices from within the church. It tells everyone to shut up.”


China Aid Contacts
Rachel Ritchie, English Media Director
Cell: (432) 553-1080 | Office: 1+ (888) 889-7757 | Other: (432) 689-6985
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.chinaaid.org

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Time: China Has Imprisoned the Pastor of Its Largest Official Church

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