A Turkish flag, with the New and the Suleymaniye mosques in the background, flies on a passenger ferry in Istanbul,
His death has sparked fears among the local Christian population that they are being targeted.
A Korean evangelist has been murdered in southeast Turkey, sparking
fears of persecution among the Christian community, the International
Christian Concern reported in a statement.
Jinwook
Kim, 41, was stabbed three times on the street in the Turkish city of
Diyarbakir on November 19. He later died of his injuries in hospital.
Kim, who had been resident in Turkey for
five years, was living in Diyarbakir having moved there earlier this
year with his family to pastor a small Christian community. He was
married with one child, and another due within days.
Turkish
authorities have arrested a 16-year-old in conjunction with the murder,
which they say was motivated by robbery. However, the local Christian
population is adamant that Kim was targeted due to his faith, and are
calling his death a martyrdom.
A
Turkish evangelist said that he had received threats the day after the
murder. “This wasn’t just a robbery; they came to kill him,” he said.
“We always get threats. They know that I am trying to spread the Gospel,
so they may target me too. This may be a sign.
”Kim
is the first Christian to have been killed in Turkey since the 2007
Zirve Publishing House murders, dubbed the 'missionary massacres' by the
local press, in which three employees of the Bible publishing house
were tortured and killed. However,
Christians in the country say that animosity toward the Christian
community has ramped up over the last three years, with harassment and
threats on the rise.
“This
is the first martyrdom since Malatya. The Turkish government has
started a massive deportation of Protestant leaders who served in Turkey
for many years,” one church leader said, adding: “But deportation isn’t
enough for evangelists. This kind of attack would scare [them]. I think
this is the last level of a plan, being like China.”
Claire
Evans, Middle East Regional Manager for International Christian
Concern, said: “The grief among Turkey’s Christian community is strongly
felt, along with great shock and fear. Just this year, we have seen a
significant increase in incidents proving how the environment has grown
more hostile toward Christianity.
"She
called on the Turkish authorities to "set public examples of religious
tolerance, and to investigate this incident with honesty and due process
of law.
In October, adverts appeared at bus stations in the city of Konya quoting a
passage from the Koran which urged locals not to take "Jews and
Christians as allies." Politically, the city is dominated by the Justice
and Development Party [AKP], which is under the leadership of the
current Turkish President, Recep Erdogan.
The
ad prompted Middle East commentator Daniel Pipes to tweet that Turkey
is becoming another Islamic state, in the mold of Iran, and wonder "when
will the world awaken to the danger?"
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