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Persecuted and Forgotten? A report on Christians oppressed for their Faith 2013-2015 SRI LANKA Country Profile and incident reports Total Population: 21m Buddhists 70.1%, Muslims 9.7%, Hindus 12.6%, Christians 7.4% (Catholics 6.1%, Protestants 1.3%) Others 0.2% Christian population: 1.55m When long-standing Sri Lanka leader Mahinda Rajapaksa was ousted in elections in January 2015, there were widespread reports that his increasingly dictatorial approach and intolerance towards minorities – including Christians – had cost him the presidency. Rajapaksa’s family was said to have close links with militant Buddhist group Bodu Bala Sena (meaning “Buddhist Power Force”) which was linked to attacks on Christian and Muslim minorities. Immediately setting a different course to Mr Rajapaksa, the new president, Maithripala Sirisena, quickly vowed to curtail his own power in a move that encouraged minorities which were, according to The Economist had been “worried by [government] repression” since the end of Sri Lanka’s bitter civil war in 2009.i Buddhist extremists destroyed or forced the closure of numerous churches: in 2014, about 60 churches and chapels were attacked.ii In 2013, a total of 105 attacks were reported.iii Bodu Bala Sena was founded by two Buddhist monks, former members of Buddhist political party Jathika Hela Urumaya (variously translated as “National Front of Liberation” or “National Heritage Party”). The founders said Jathika Hela Urumaya was not militant enough to protect Buddhism.iv Bodu Bala Sena was said to have orchestrated uprisings in two Muslim-majority towns in June 2014, on the Sinhalese-dominated southern coast, that lead to the deaths of four people and injured more than 80.v Muslims and Christians alike had been subjected to hate speech and violence in the months leading up to the incident.vi Moderate Buddhist monk Wataraka Vijitha Thero was found naked and beaten unconscious after criticising the BBS following the anti-Muslim riots.vii The resurgence of Sinhalese Buddhist nationalism followed the 2009 victory of the Sri Lankan government in the civil war. Nationalists have voiced strong opposition to people converting from Buddhism to other religions, even though this is allowed by law. Such conversions are often interpreted as a result of coercion and force – and as an attack on the country’s traditional religious culture. Jathika Hela Urumaya, which is part of the ruling alliance, unsuccessfully tried to legislate against “unethical” conversions in parliament in 2009 and again in 2011.viii However, a number of measures have been introduced by the Religious Affairs Ministry, which have been interpreted as efforts to assert Buddhism and repress minority faiths. A cap on the building of places of worship was announced: the ministry’s secretary M. D. K. Dissanayake said that the existing number of places was sufficient for the current needs and that permission from the Ministry of Buddha Sasana and (Buddhist) Religious Affairs would be required for new buildings.ix The ministry also proposed a new law seeking action against publications, both print and online, that defame the original teachings and traditions of the country’s major religions. According to the bill drafted by the Ministry, a Buddhist Publications Regulatory Board would be formed with authority to regulate any publication that defames Buddhism, its philosophy or traditions.x The UN refugee agency accused Sri Lanka of breaking international law after it forced out Pakistani asylum seekers – including Christians –without a fair hearing in 2014. Adrian Edwards, spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said: “Fundamentally, this is a breach of the principle of no forced returns. That’s a clear violation of international law.” The country is not a signatory to the 1951 refugees’ convention. Hundreds of Pakistani Christians fleeing persecution have fled to Sri Lanka seeking safety.xi INCIDENT REPORTS September 2013: The house of a pastor of the Assembly of God Church in the Agunukolapalassa area of Hambanthota District was set ablaze on the 2nd. Plastic bags filled with kerosene and petrol were thrown at his home. The pastor and his wife were awoken by the attack and the mob fled. The pastor had received threats prior to the attack. September 2013: Buddhist monk Pitipana Seelawansa Thero and four others from Padukka Puraanas Viharaya Temple, led a mob attack on Jeevana Diya Church in the Meegoda area of Colombo District on 8th. The monks beat the pastor until he fell unconscious, and destroyed church property. The attackers accused the minister of forcibly converting Buddhists to Christianity.xii December 2013: On Christmas Eve, three churches in southern Sri Lanka were attacked by mobs: the Assemblies of God Church in Angunukolapalassa, the Assemblies of God Church in Hikkaduwa and the Light House Church Hikkaduwa.xiii January 2014: Buddhist mobs attacked three Christian places of worship saying they were illegal and were trying to convert Buddhists. The Assemblies of God Church and Calvary Free Church were attacked in Hikkaduwa on Saturday 12th the same day a chapel belonging to Church of the Foursquare Gospel was set ablaze in Pitipana, near Colombo. The churches in Hikkaduwa suffered extensive damage, with windows and furniture smashed and Bibles set ablaze. A note was left outside the chapel in Pitipana, which was saved before it burned down, threatening further violence. It was one of three churches attacked on Christmas Eve. Policemen were stationed outside the church after further threats, but a mob of around 250 people broke through the gates of the church, as captured by this video on Derana TV.xiv January 2014: The National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka said police questioned several ministers, asking whether their churches were legal, and in some cases warning them not to meet because of threats from Buddhist monks. Ministers from the Pastors Fellowship in Vavuniya, northern Sri Lanka, and the Church of Grace in Warakapola, near Colombo, were both questioned by police. Meanwhile, the house of the pastor of the Rathgama Christian Church, near Hikkaduwa, was vandalised and threats were made against the Suveya Doratuwa Church in Bibile, eastern Sri Lanka.xv February 2014: At Holy Family Church, Asgiriya, Kandy District, a 250-strong mob led by 11 Buddhist monks stormed the minister’s home, demanding he stop services forthwith. The mob dragged out the pastor and his wife, assaulting them.xvi April 2014: The government of Sri Lanka set up the Religious Disputes Unit in response to increasing religious intolerance against minorities by some Buddhist extremist groups. The Religious Disputes Unit’s agents answer to the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Buddha Sasana. Fr Emmanuel Sebamalai said, “The special unit will not solve the crisis we are experiencing. Its creation proves that there is a problem between Buddhism and other religions. However, the government supports Buddhists and helps their radical elements when they attack minorities with impunity.” Fr Oswald B Firth, OMI, a former national director of Caritas Sri Lanka who now lives in Australia, sad the religious police “is the height of irony for the simple reason that religious intolerance (ostensibly the government’s reason for the force) is practiced by Bodu Bala Sena, which operates under the protection of the Ministry of Defence.”xvii June 2014: A mob attacked a Christian home in Madu village, Mannar hospitalising a minister and three members of his congregation. The minister and members of the congregation had gone to the home where there was due to be a meeting with police about threats made to Christians at a prayer meeting there the previous day. But before police arrived some 150 villagers surrounded the house, and 40 forced their way in, beating and assaulting the Christians.xviii June 2014: A female Christian worker in Kandy district was hospitalised for two days after being brutally attacked by a 25-strong mob. The mob, which included five Buddhist monks, raided a house in Waththegama where a prayer meeting was being held. The woman was dragged to the village temple where she was drenched with water and partially strangled. She was threatened with death if she entered the village again.xix July 2014: Following accusations of unethical conversions Ravana Balaya, a Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist organisation, warned Evangelical churches in Polonnaruwa to stop their activities. Members of the group, including Buddhist monks and Hindu priests, visited more than 20 prayer services from 15th to 19th. The Venerable Ittekande Saddhatissa Thero, General Secretary of Ravana Balaya said: “We have gotten hundreds of complaints from Buddhists and Hindus that Evangelical pastors convert Buddhists to their religion and offer gifts and money to them.” But Pastor O. S. Fernando, president of the Pastors’ Fellowship Group in Polonnruwa, denied the claims: “We never convert by force [or] put up new houses to attract the faithful. It’s their own decision.”xx August 2014: A meeting at the Centre for Society and Religion in Colombo was attacked by Buddhist extremists on the 4th. Priests, Sisters, lay people, human rights activists, lawyers and embassy representatives were meeting at the centre, looking at ways of helping families of people who went missing during the civil war locate their loved ones. The extremists broke into the building, disrupted the meeting and threatened to demolish the centre, which is run by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate.xxi September 2014: Speaking at the 27th session of the UN Human Rights Council, the new UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Prince Zeid Al-Hussein condemned violence against religious minorities. “I am alarmed at threats currently being levelled against the Human rights community of Sri Lanka, as well as respective victims and witnesses, I also deplore recent incitements in violence against the country’s Muslim and Christian minorities.”xxii August-October 2014: Christians fleeing religious persecution in Pakistan were among more than 100 refugee seekers deported after legal attempts to stop them being repatriated failed. At least 142 Pakistanis were arrested in police sweeps of Pakistani neighbourhoods in Negombo, western Sri Lanka, beginning on 9th June. The Central Secretariat of Pakistan Christian Congress alleged Pakistan’s ruling Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz Group conspired with the Intelligence Bureau of Pakistan to fabricate false evidence to disprove Christian asylum seekers’ claims. UN Special Rapporteur on minority issues Rita Izsák criticised the deportations, saying: “Most asylum seekers from Pakistan belong to religious minorities, including Ahmadiyya Muslim, Christian and Shia groups that are often subjected to persecution, discrimination and violence in Pakistan. Many of them are being deported despite being registered with UNHCR and having their first instance interviews still pending.”xxiii January 2015: Dilantha Withanage, chief executive of Bodu Bala Sena announced the formation of a new political party backed by the group. Claiming that the party would not be against any religious group, but merely about protecting Buddhist values he said: “We wish we had a leader like [India’s] Narendra Modi… There are lots of similarities between India and Sri Lanka. Both of us face threats from Muslims and minorities who are actively engaged in conversions. When Sinhalese families have a child or two, minorities have half a dozen or more. When foreign money plays behind such activities, we need to resist. So Modi and his party is a great inspiration for us.”xxiv January 2015: After the Vatican confirmed Pope Francis’s three-day visit, Bodu Bala Sena called on the pontiff to acknowledge Christian oppression in the island’s history. Bodu Bala Sena’s leader Galagoda Atte Gnanasara said: “Pope Francis must apologise to Buddhists for the atrocities committed by Christian colonial governments in South Asia.”xxv March 2015: State officials demanded that the pastor of a National Gospel Church in Nivithigala, Ratnapura district register his church – even though this is not a legal requirement. The congregation suspects Buddhist monks pressured officials to take action.xxvi i The Economist, 17/01/15 http://www.economist.com/news/asia/21639559-new-president-promises-newleaf-politics-ask-siri ii Indian Express, 20/01/15 iii Ecumenical News Friday, 25/07/14 http://www.ecumenicalnews.com/article/buddhist-extremists-accusedof-persecuting-sri-lanka-christians-25786 iv Spero News, 16/12/12 v Indian Express, 20/01/15 vi Asian Tribune, 18/06/14 http://www.asiantribune.com/node/80021 vii AsiaNews, 16/06/14 viii Fides, 17/12/11 ix Barnabus Fund, 09/05/14 x [Sri Lanka] Daily Mirror, 16/08/13 xi Al Jazeera, 13/08/14 xii Morning Star News, 26/09/13 xiii World Watch Monitor, 28/01/14 xiv World Watch Monitor, 28/01/14; BBC News (online) 13/01/14 xv World Watch Monitor, 28/01/14 xvi Release international, 11/03/14 xvii Asia News, 06/05/14 xviii Release International, 11/06/04 xix Release International,11/06/10 xx UCAN, 19/07/14 xxi Vatican Insider, 08/08/14 http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/world-news/detail/articolo/sri-lanka-srilanka-sri-lanka-35681/ xxii News First, 08/09/14 http://newsfirst.lk/english/2014/09/new-un-human-rights-chief-deplores-violencemulsims-christians-sl/52775 xxiii HRW, 02/07/14, http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=14942&LangID=E#sthash.nbBPgwYo .dpuf 14 Aug 2014 UN; Pakistan Christian Post, 02/10/14 xxiv Indian Express, 20/01/15 xxv Catholic Herald, 02/01/15 xxvi Release International, 29/03/15 http://www.releaseinternational.org/prayer-shield-29th-march-2015-srilanka/ www.acnuk.org/persecution