The Monarch Report@monarchreport25
Chinese authorities carried out a large-scale pre-dawn raid on Yayang Church in Wenzhou — long known as “China’s Jerusalem” for its historic and vibrant Christian community.
Over 200 believers were detained during a prayer vigil, with police using signal jamming, confiscating phones, and reportedly placing black hoods on members.
As of mid-March, 22 people remain missing without formal charges, legal documents, or information provided to their families. Bulldozers later removed the church’s bell tower and cross after the congregation refused to install Communist Party surveillance cameras and hang the national flag inside the sanctuary.
The operation falls under a national campaign called “Five Entries, Five Transformations,” designed to place all houses of worship under direct Communist Party control. Wenzhou’s Christian community has long symbolized faith resilience in China, making this incident particularly significant.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has described China’s record on religious freedom as among the worst in the world, and the U.S. Congress is considering targeted sanctions on officials responsible for such persecution.
When a major religious community faces coordinated state action, including prolonged detention without transparency, it raises fundamental questions about religious freedom and the rule of law in China.
International awareness matters because these events test the global commitment to protecting freedom of belief, even in authoritarian contexts.
Do you believe the international community should apply stronger pressure on China regarding religious persecution, or is this an internal matter best left to Chinese authorities?