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Politics

German MPs denounce violence against Christians

April 23, 2019

German politicians across the political spectrum say the persecution of Christians worldwide is growing. Their statements came after a spate of bomb attacks on churches and hotels in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday.

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A crime scene official inspects the site of a bomb blast inside a church in Negombo
Image: Reuters/Stringer

On Tuesday, German lawmakers called for stronger protection of Christian minorities worldwide after coordinated attacks on churches and hotels in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday killed more than 300 people.

Members of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) and the Greens all expressed their concern about what they saw as growing violence against Christians.

Read more: German churches warn of increasing oppression of Christians worldwide

'Growing persecution'

Germany's commissioner for religious freedom, Markus Grübel (CDU), told Die Welt newspaper that the Sri Lankan attacks were part of what appeared to be a global trend.

"Christians are the target of radical Muslims worldwide," Grübel said, a phenomenon that he found to be "incomprehensible," given "Christianity's close relation to Islam."

Former CDU parliamentary leader Volker Kauder echoed his colleague's sentiment, denouncing "growing persecution of Christians in the entire Asian region" in an interview with Bild newspaper.

For Kauder, the attacks in Sri Lanka did not represent an isolated case: "Nationalist movements of Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims are becoming more and more militant here."

Read more: Germany's Christian autobahn churches draw devoted drivers

Europe must 'stand up'

The FDP's deputy leader in the German parliament, Michael Theurer, told Die Welt that more than 100 million Christians live in countries "where the basic human right of religious freedom is currently not respected."

In many places, such as "China, North Korea, Pakistan or parts of Nigeria," Christians constitue the largest persecuted minority, Theurer said.

Sven Giegold, a member for the Greens in the European Parliament, shared the view that Christians' religious freedom is threatened worldwide.

"Europe must emphatically stand up in the world for the right to freedom of religion," Giegold said.

jcg/amp (AFP, KNA)

The German Basic Law: freedom of religion

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