Eleven Laotian families, about
fifty people in all, face eviction and expulsion from their land because they converted
to Christianity, Human Rights Watch for Lao Religious Freedom (HRWLRF)
reported.
The organisation said that at the end of August, the
authorities in Nongdaeng village (Borikan District, central province of
Bolikhamsai) issued an expulsion order to each head of the family.
To avoid it, they have to abjure their faith and
return to the local traditional religion (animism). However, as time goes by, the
possibility of violent eviction is getting more likely.
Local sources note that on 30 August, village
authorities, led by the chief, summoned the Christian families to address
issues related to religion.
During the meeting, they ordered them to abandon
Christianity and return to animism, making (spurious) accusations that had
embraced a "foreign religion" linked to "Western powers", which
they deemed was destructive to Laotian national unity.
To make their point, both village chief and village council
insisted that they would not tolerate "the presence of Christians, or the
practice of that worship" in Nongdaeng.
Families were given three days to comply with the order.
However, the latter refused and continued to practice their faith, claiming that
it was a right guaranteed under the constitution of Laos.
The problem emerged between April and May, when three
families began practicing the Christian faith. They were later joined by dozens
of other people attracted to the practice and teachings inspired by the life of
Jesus.
Since the Communists came to power in 1975, and the resulting
expulsion of foreign missionaries, the Christian minority in Laos has been
under strict controls, its right to worship limited.
In a country of six million people, most people (67
per cent) are Buddhist. Christians make up about 2 per cent of the total, 0.7
per cent Catholic.
Protestant communities have suffered the most from religious
persecution, a situation AsiaNews documented
in the past.
Cases include peasants
deprived of food for their faith and clergymen
arrested by the authorities.
Since April 2011, tighter controls have been imposed, following
a violent crackdown against protests led by some groups within the country's Hmong
ethnic minority.