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China Detains Underground Catholic Bishop: Report

posted by nsymmonds | 4:27pm Monday August 25, 2008

Associated Press – August 25, 2008
BEIJING – Security agents detained an elderly bishop of an underground Catholic church in northern China hours before the closing of the Olympic Games, a U.S.-based group said Monday.
Bishop Julius Jia Zhiguo, 73, of Zhengding, a city in northern Hebei province, was taken by six government officials from his cathedral on Sunday morning, the Cardinal Kung Foundation said in a statement.
The independent foundation, which aims to promote the Roman Catholic Church in China, said it did not know where or why Jia was being detained.
A woman who answered the phone at the city’s public security bureau said she had not heard about the case, as did a man at the office of Catholic and Christian affairs of Hebei’s religious bureau. He gave only his surname, Zhang, as is common with Chinese officials.
“We will not easily arrest people if they don’t break any law,” Zhang said.
Jia has been repeatedly detained by security forces in China, which broke ties with the Vatican in 1951 and demands that Catholics worship only in government-controlled churches. Such churches recognize the pope as a spiritual leader but appoint their own priests and bishops.
Millions remain loyal to the pope and worship in secret, but priests and members of their congregations are frequently detained and harassed.
Pope Benedict XVI sent a special letter to Catholics in China last year that praised the underground church but urged the faithful to reconcile with followers of the official church. On the eve of the Beijing Olympics, the pope sent greetings to the Chinese people and said he hoped the games would offer an example of coexistence among people from different countries.
On Aug. 10, during the opening weekend of the Olympics, a Chinese Christian activist was detained on his way to a church service attended by President Bush in Beijing. The games ended Sunday night.
The foundation said Jia has been detained a dozen times since January 2004. The most recent detention was in August last year.
“The persecution of religious believers is very much alive in China and ongoing regardless of the fact that the Olympics games has just been held in China,” the foundation statement said.
Jia, who was ordained in 1980, had been kept under house arrest in the living quarters of his cathedral before being detained. He was allowed few visitors and only under supervision, the statement said. It did not say how long he had been held under house arrest.
Jia’s Zhengding diocese, 150 miles southwest of Beijing in Hebei, is a traditional stronghold of Catholic sentiment in northern China.
China faces routine criticism for human rights violations and repression of religious freedom. Religious practice is heavily regulated by the Communist Party, with worship allowed only in party-controlled churches, temples and mosques, while those gathering outside risk harassment, arrest and terms in labor camps or prison.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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Comments read comments(6)
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pagansister

posted August 25, 2008 at 8:11 pm


The Chinese are staying true to form.



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jestrfyl

posted August 25, 2008 at 11:26 pm


Wow, you pan the cameras in another direction, or simply turn them off, and problems start right away. Maybe the Bishop ought to change his name to Michael Phelps! Why did it take six agents to arrest one 73 year old Bishop? Were they expecting people to react in a forceful, even excited or angry way? Would that not be an indicator that they are over-reacting, taking the whole thing too far? Is he really that great a threat to the nation that took the most gold metals inthe Olympics?
How bizarrely feeble the Chinese government looks in this whole thing.



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jjkans

posted August 26, 2008 at 9:34 am


I’m glad to see that awarding the Olympics, an event promoting brother/sister hood and celebrating our human community, has had such a great impact. A lot of onlookers thought it would open up Chinese society. I’m more with the group who thought it would embolden the tyrants in Beijing, and thats exactly what’s happening. I hope this will make people think twice about awarding evil. Pax!



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cknuck

posted August 26, 2008 at 10:22 pm


The Olympic games were great because of it’s participates but China the country used it to put makeup on a dirty face, and deodorant without a shower.



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pagansister

posted August 26, 2008 at 10:47 pm


The Olympics were great, cknuck, and for the reasons you mentioned. The U.S. did itself proud, as well as many other countries did too.
China on the other hand? Yep, makeup on a dirty face and the deodorant without the shower.



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jestrfyl

posted August 27, 2008 at 12:11 am


To follow up on ck’s comment and p-s’s assent, this incident makes China look like a contestant from Synchronized Swim with no pool to swim in (I can not BELIEVE their cosmetic choices! It’s like Mimi from the Drew Carey Show was their cosmetic consultant!)



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