INTERNATIONAL
Algerian Evangelist says
Police, Others Targeting
Him
Journalist denies making
death threats; court
postpones trial.
By Peter Lamprecht
ISTANBUL,
A court
yesterday postponed
until next Wednesday
(June 25) a hearing in
west Algeria for a
church leader on trial
for evangelism.
Already convicted of
evangelism and blasphemy
in two separate cases
this year, Rachid
Muhammad Essaghir, 37,
believes he is being
targeted for his work
with Christians in
Tiaret.
The convert to
Christianity, who
regularly posts his
telephone number on
evangelistic Christian
satellite TV programs,
said that he has
received death threats
from Algerian journalist
Haitham Rabani in recent
months. A correspondent
tracking Christianity in
Algeria, Rabani told
Compass that he did not
threaten Essaghir but
did send him text
messages.
At the same time, Rabani
admitted threatening the
host of an Al-Hayat
Christian satellite talk
show who is also named
Rachid.
“I told him, ‘If I
capture you, I will kill
you,’” Rabani told
Compass, saying that he
had not actually meant
to carry out the threat.
“We speak like that in
our country, a father
says it to his son,”
Rabani said. “But if I
really meant it, I would
have taken a plane to
Cyprus and killed him.”
The journalist said that
the talk show host made
inflammatory remarks
about Islam and Algeria
that provoked him to
make the threats.
“He said that the Quran
is not real and the
Bible is real, it’s
quite normal,” Rabani
said. “But during the
talk, he accused our
community of being a
France community, less
Islamic than before.”
Rabani said he
text-messaged Essaghir a
number of times to ask
him to tell the talk
show host to remove a
recording of the
conversation from the
Internet.
Arrested over Box of
Books
A convert to
Christianity who moved
to Tiaret (150 miles
southwest of Algiers)
four years ago, Essaghir
said that his trouble
with the government
began following a June
2007 incident that
prompted his current
trial.
At that time police
found a box of Christian
books in Essaghir’s
possession while he was
driving with a friend in
the vicinity of
Tissemsilt, east of
Tiaret.
At a court hearing last
September, a state
prosecutor charged the
men with “distributing
documents to shake the
faith of Muslims.” The
case was one of the
first instances that a
February 2006 law
outlawing any form of
evangelizing Muslims had
been implemented. Under
Ordinance 06-03,
attempts to convert
Muslims to another
religion can be punished
with up to five years
imprisonment and a 1
million-dinar (US$16,407)
fine.
The Tissemsilt court
convicted the men in
their absence on
November 28, 2007. It
was not until Essaghir’s
companion, identified
only as Djallal, was
arrested on May 22 that
the men discovered they
had been given two-year
sentences and 5,000-euro
fines.
Djallal was released on
May 25, and the two
Christians are now being
tried again in
Tissemsilt, based on the
fact that they were not
at the November ruling,
defense lawyer
Khelloudja Khalfoun
said. Yesterday’s
hearing was postponed
until June 25 because
Khalfoun was unable to
attend.
Since his arrest in
possession of Christian
literature, the church
elder said that police
have continued to target
him.
“I have the feeling they
are following me all the
time,” Essaghir told
Compass.
On May 9 the church
leader and five other
men were arrested by
police while leaving a
prayer meeting at
Essaghir’s home.
Initially charged with
“distributing documents
to shake the faith of
Muslims,” four of the
six men were convicted.
Essaghir received a six-
month suspended sentence
and a 200,000-dinar (US$3,282)
fine.
When police arrested a
Christian from Tiaret in
a separate incident on
April 25, they refused
to allow the convert to
make a phone call,
saying that they knew he
would contact Essaghir.
In April, officials
closed Essaghir’s
Internet café on the
basis that he lacked
written permission from
local police. Friends of
the Christian said that
police were legally
justified in closing the
café, but that it was
common for such cafés,
numerous in Algerian
cities, to function
without police
permission.
“Because he is a
Christian and well
known, there is no way
he can stay open,” said
one of Essaghir’s
friends.
Another friend commented
that Essaghir’s
situation also placed
pressure on his wife and
1-year-old daughter.
“Authorities have
decided to make sure he
stops talking about his
faith,” the friend said.
“That has not happened,
and according to
Essaghir it will never
happen, even if he has
to go to prison.”
Religious Freedom Awash
The February 2006 law
appears to contradict
Article 18 of the
International Covenant
on Civil and Political
Rights, to which Algeria
is a signatory,
asserting that religious
freedom includes the
right to manifest one’s
religion or belief in
worship, observance,
practice or teaching.
Algerian media have
produced a wave of
articles this year
decrying “evangelization
campaigns” designed to
convert Muslims to
Christianity and to
undermine Algeria’s
political unity.
Religious Affairs
Minister Bu’Abdallah
Ghoulamullah said Monday
(June 16) that
evangelization is the
new terrorism, according
to Arabic daily
Echorouk.
“Their objective is to
trigger opposition and
tension in families,”
Ghoulamullah said,
asserting that such
groups had no intention
of winning converts to
Christianity.
Echoing Ghoulamullah’s
statement, Rabani said
that Essaghir and other
members of what he
termed “American
Anglican” groups were
using religion for
political ends.
“They are going to
Kabylie [region] and
saying to many Kabyls
that they are of Jewish
origin, that they have
to support Israel,”
Rabani told Compass,
referring to an ethnic
minority in eastern
Algeria.
Their language and
culture distinct from
that of Algeria’s Arab
majority, eastern
Algeria’s Kabyl people
have long sought greater
autonomy under Algerian
law.
Evangelical Protestants
have reported a growing
number of conversions
from Islam to
Christianity in Kabyl in
recent years. The region
is now home to dozens of
churches and
congregations, some of
them registered with the
government.
Observers familiar with
the political situation
told Compass that
antagonistic media
accounts may be a
government ploy to
distract people from
other problems, such as
a national housing
shortage and inflation
of staple goods prices.
The media campaign
against Christians has
been accompanied by a
series of church closure
orders and court cases
sentencing Christians on
religious charges.
Provided by Compass
Direct News