North Korea arrests 5 Christians during underground church service

Just as they had every Sunday at 5 a.m., the five Christians gathered at the farmhouse for prayer and Bible study. But this time the police were waiting for them. 

Tipped off by an informant, authorities arrested the believers on charges of believing in God, a crime in a country where all religion is illegal – except for the reverence everyone is required to show for the country’s leader Kim Jong Un, and its past leaders, his father and grandfather.

Sources told Radio Free Asia’s Korean Service that the Christians, arrested on April 30, are relatives who met weekly at the farmhouse in Tongam village, outside Sunchon city in South Pyongan province, in central North Korea.

“At the site of the worship service, the police retrieved dozens of Bible booklets and arrested all in attendance,” a resident of the province told RFA on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

She said that an informant tipped off the police about the secret Sunday morning gathering.

ENG_KOR_ChurchArrests_05222023 _02.JPG
A South Korean Christian woman prays during a service denouncing North Korean leader Kim Jong Il’s dictatorship and alleged human rights violations against North Koreans, at Imjingak in Paju near the border village of Panmunjom. South Korea, Thursday, Dec. 31, 2009. Sources told Radio Free Asia’s Korean Service that 5 Christians arrested on April 30 during underground church service are relatives who met weekly at the farmhouse in Tongam village, outside Sunchon city in South Pyongan province, in central North Korea. Credit: Ahn Young-joon/AP

News of the raid spread quickly throughout Sunchon, another resident who witnessed the arrest told RFA.

“They were praying and reading the Bible together,” she said. “They got together with their relatives and [prayed] ‘Oh Jesus, Lord Jesus … ,’ like that. And then they got arrested.” 

If the past is any indication, the believers will be sent to labor camps to serve time. RFA was not able to confirm their status after the raid.

Christian roots

It was not the first time that authorities had rounded up Christians in Tongam.

Underground churches in the village were raided in 2005 and 1997, and the believers were sent to do hard labor in concentration camps.

Tongam has a history with Christianity. It was once the site of a large church building that stood even after the Japanese occupied the Korean peninsula in 1905 and made Shinto the state religion. 

“That church was at the foot of the mountain in Tongam village,” the second resident said. “I knew about it because my mother told me it was where the missionaries had been before liberation [from Japanese rule in 1945].”

Sunchon had two Catholic and 31 Protestant churches before the Peninsula was freed from Japanese rule, according to a pastor with experience leading missions in North Korea.

ENG_KOR_ChurchArrests_05222023 _03.JPG
People bow to the statues of former leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il on Mansu Hill to mark the 11th anniversary of the death of Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang, Dec. 17, 2022. Credit: Cha Song Ho/AP

The Soviet-controlled northern half of Korea after 1945 adhered to the idea that religion was the opium of the masses, and therefore promoted atheism. When North Korea was established in 1948, all religions became illegal. It was then that many of the churches in Sunchon began to disappear, and believers in Tongam had to go underground.

North Korea is known to execute, torture and physically abuse individuals for their religious activities, the U.S. State Department’s 2022 International Religious Freedom Report said. 

It is one of 17 countries identified to be involved in or condoning systematic, continuous and serious violations of freedom of religion and belief, according to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom’s 2023 annual report.

Bibles and other religious materials are typically smuggled into the country over the Chinese border, where they are distributed to underground churches through a secret network, the second source said.

Despite pressure from authorities, the five captured Christians have refused to renounce their religion, she said.

“A staff member of the judicial agency told us that the [believers] refused to tell where they got their Bibles and said, ‘All for Jesus, even in death.’”

Translated Claire Shinyoung Oh Lee. Edited by Eugene Whong and Malcolm Foster.

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WHO: Stop tobacco farming, grow food instead

With hunger spreading worldwide and tobacco being responsible for eight million deaths each year, the World Health Organization (WHO) on Saturday urged countries to stop subsidizing tobacco crops and instead help farmers grow food. Ahead of World No Tobacco Day on Wednesday (May 31, 2023), WHO deplored that 3.2 million hectares of fertile land across 124 countries are being used to grow deadly tobacco – even in places where people are starving. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that governments across the world ‘spend millions supporting tobacco farms.’ He urged countries to choose to grow food instead and allow the world to ‘prioritize health, preserve ecosystems, and strengthen food security for all.’ The agency’s new report ‘Grow food, not tobacco’ said that 349 million people are facing acute food insecurity, many of them in some 30 countries on the African continent, where tobacco cultivation has increased by 15 percent in the last decade. Nine of the 10 largest tobacco cultivators are from low and middle-income countries. WHO said tobacco farming in these countries has taken up many parts of their arable land, and the environment and the communities which rely on it also suffer, as the crop’s expansion drives deforestation, contamination of water sources and soil degradation. The report also exposes the tobacco industry for trapping farmers in a vicious cycle of dependence and exaggerating the economic benefits of tobacco as a cash crop. WHO, along with the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP) have joined forces around the Tobacco Free Farms initiative, to help thousands of farmers in countries like Kenya and Zambia to grow sustainable food crops instead of tobacco. The program provides farmers with microcredit lending to pay off their debts with tobacco companies, as well as knowledge and training to grow alternative crops, and a market for their harvest.

Source: Philippines News Agency

MOHE, MOE TO ADDRESS GLUT OF GRADUATE TEACHERS

The Ministry of Higher Education (MoHE) will work closely with the Ministry of Education (MOE) in order to address the issue of glut of graduate teachers in the country.

“It is very important for us to know the projections (of the needed teachers) that can only be provided by the MOE in our effort to address this issue.

“With so many students taking teaching courses, we should see that teachers are needed not only in government schools but also in private schools and to work abroad,” he told reporters after attending the Universiti Malaysia Terengganu Semarak Komuniti Kota Tinggi programme at Sekolah Kebangsaan Sedili Besar here today.

He said this in response to National Union of Teaching Profession president Aminuddin Awang’s statement on the glut of graduate teachers in the market.

The Kota Tinggi MP also said that he had asked Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris to pay extra attention to producing teachers for technical and vocational education and training (TVET) education centres.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

KKD COMMITTED TO ESTABLISHING MALAYSIA MEDIA COUNCIL – FAHMI

The Ministry of Communications and Digital (KKD) are committed to ensure the establishment of the Malaysian Media Council (MMC).

Its Minister Fahmi Fadzil said the efforts are the government’s commitment and support to continue enhancing media freedom in the country as well as assist media practitioners to face the challenges.

“This efforts may involve changes in the laws and provisions ….to encourage transparency and accountability in the media sector,” he said in his speech at the 2023 National Journalists’ Day celebration (HAWANA 2023), here today.

Fahmi said Malaysia’s ability to improve its status in the Press Freedom Index 2023 as released by the Reporters Without Borders is a manifestation of the government’s commitment under the leadership of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim to guarantee press freedom for all media practitioners in the country.

Malaysia is ranked 73rd in the World Press Freedom Index 2023, as released by Reporters Without Borders, the highest Malaysia has achieved in many years.

Fahmi said he hopes members of the media will be able to think and hold conversations and discussions that will broaden horizons and carry on with what needs to be done for the future of this industry.

“However, I would like to remind that press freedom is not a ticket or licence to disseminate or spread information or news from unreliable source, slanderous news that can disrupt or harm the peace and security of the people and the country,” he said.

Fahmi said that in line with the accelerated growth in the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) including in media industries, media practitioners should help the government to understand and address some of the regulatory challenges.

“It is important to ensure the country is devoid of issues related to racial sensitivity, security, religious sensitivity, sabotage of economy or other issues that may harm unity and peace,” he said.

He added that KKD would continue to be committed to safeguard the welfare and challenges faced by media practitioners in the country.

“For that purpose, a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programme – Tabung Kasih@HAWANA – was launched to unite former media personnel and to assist veteran journalists who are suffering from sickness.

“The initiative to be introduced by the Ministry through BERNAMA will track down journalists who need assistance,” he said.

The three-day Hawana 2023 celebration, with the theme ‘Media Bebas, Tunjang Demokrasi’ (Free Media, Pillar of Democracy), which aims to re-emphasise the issue of media freedom for journalists in carrying out their duties, began today.

The date May 29 was gazetted as National Journalists’ Day, marking the publication of the first edition of the Malay newspaper, Utusan Melayu, on May 29, 1939.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

MALAYSIAN MEDIA COUNCIL BILL EXPECTED TO BE TABLED AT PARLIAMENT LATEST MARCH 2024 – FAHMI

The Malaysian Media Council Bill is expected to be tabled in Parliament in March next year at the latest.

Communications and Digital Minister Fahmi Fadzil said his ministry was currently at the final phase of drafting the bill before conducting engagement sessions with media industry players.

“We will forward the draft to the Attorney-General’s Chambers for review and then it will be brought to the Cabinet. After the Cabinet approves, it will be tabled in Parliament.

“We expect it to be as early as October when Parliament is in session or at the latest in the first session in 2024, around March,” he said at a media conference after the National Journalists’ Day (HAWANA 2023) main event that was officiated by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim here today.

He said that after the bill was tabled and approved, the following HAWANA celebrations could be managed and conducted by the Malaysian Media Council in line with the prime minister’s intentions.

Fahmi also said his ministry was studying issues related to advertising expenditure brought up by media practitioners during previous engagement sessions.

“I have received some initial framework on mechanisms used by other countries. But to review and adapt it to the local situation, I expect we can form a taskforce for a more comprehensive engagement process.

“After that process is complete, we can bring a draft on it to the Attorney-General’s Chambers, followed by the Cabinet,” he said, adding that he hoped that industry players would continue giving ideas and suggestions to realise that effort.

On the initial RM1 million funding for Tabung Kasih@Hawana announced by the Prime Minister, he said that it would bolster efforts by his ministry to continue to engage journalists who face health and financial issues.

“I really do understand the situation they face. Besides financial aid, there are other aspects we can look at, for instance, helping them find a new career or how they can benefit from the digital economy to survive,” he added.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency