Headlines
  • Iran peace talks get underway.
  • According to Lebanon's Ministry of Health, Israeli military activity in three instances in the Nabatieh district resulted in at least ten fatalities and nine injuries.
  • US Vice President J. D. Vance has arrived to Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, to lead the cease-fire talks.
  • The speaker of Iran's parliament Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf ​ is leading the delegation that has arrived to Pakistan for talks with the United States.
  • As part of talks with Lebanon that are scheduled to begin next week, Israel stated on Friday that it will not negotiate about a truce with the militant pro Iran Hezbollah group.
  • The president of Lebanon announced on Friday that Israel and Lebanon would meet in Washington, D.C., next week to talk about a truce and begin talks.
  • More than 180 Hezbollah fighters were killed in airstrikes the Israeli military carried out in Lebanon two days prior, the Israeli military claimed on Friday.
  • Hezbollah claims to have bombed Israeli military positions in southern Lebanon's Tyre and Shamaa.
  • More than 3,000 Iranians have died as a result of U.S.-Israeli attacks since February 28, Abbas Masjedi, the head of Iran's Forensic Medicine Organization, said Mizan, the official news agency of the Iranian judiciary, on Thursday.

More Details

China Arrests Underground Church Founder, Pastors

Moves against the Zion Church come after Beijing implemented new rules restricting religious speech online.

By RFA staff

The founder of one of China’s most prominent underground churches and dozens of its pastors and members have been arrested, the founder’s family and a church spokesperson said, part of a multi-city crackdown in recent days.

The founder of one of China’s most prominent underground churches and dozens of its pastors and members have been arrested, the founder’s family and a church spokesperson said, part of a multi-city crackdown in recent days.

Jin Mingri, who founded Zion Church, a house of worship not sanctioned by the Chinese government, was arrested at his home in the city of Beihai in the southern region of Guangxi on Friday evening, his daughter, Grace Jin, and a church spokesperson, Sean Long, told reporters.

Grace Jin said she was concerned for her 56-year-old father’s health and his access to legal representation.

“He’s been hospitalized in the past for diabetes. We’re worried since he requires medication,” she told Reuters. “I’ve also been notified that lawyers are not allowed to meet the pastors, so that is very concerning to us.”

Jin was detained on “suspicion of the illegal use of information networks,” according to a detention notice viewed by Agence France-Presse. Since Thursday, police have arrested church leaders and members in Shanghai, Beijing, Zhejiang, Guangxi, Shandong, Sichuan and Henan, according to a list compiled by church members that was seen by AFP.

“House” churches like Zion Church generally operate without official registration documents and without the involvement of local religious affairs bureaus. Zion Church has about 5,000 regular worshippers across nearly 50 cities who attend sermons on Zoom and in small in-person gatherings, Long told Reuters.

The arrests come a month after Beijing’s top religion regulator issued new rules banning unauthorized online preaching, as well as a broader crackdown on online content that expresses views contrary to the Chinese Communist Party’s goals. Supporters fear the pastors could soon be indicted under these new rules.

In a statement released Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the arrests and called on Beijing to release the pastors.

“This crackdown further demonstrates how the CCP exercises hostility towards Christians who reject Party interference in their faith and choose to worship at unregistered house churches,” Rubio said.

House churches have long drawn Beijing’s scrutiny. In 2009, RFA spoke with pastors including Jin Mingri about signs then that the government was looking to better understand the role of underground houses of worship. In the years since, Beijing has cracked down on house churches and has put pastors at some Protestant churches through intensive training sessions as part of a “sinicization” campaign. According to the U.S. State Department, China continues to arrest thousands of people per year for worshipping in ways not approved by the CCP.

Includes reporting by Agence France-Presse and Reuters.

“Copyright © 1998-2023, RFA.
Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia,
2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington, D.C. 20036.
https://www.rfa.org.”

Related Article

A Chinese International Student Activist Goes…

A Chinese international student and activist has gone missing during a trip to China to visit family ...
September 19, 2025

Chinese Rights Lawyer Lu Siwei Sentenced…

Prominent Chinese rights lawyer Lu Siwei, who was arrested and deported from Laos in 2023, was sente ...
April 19, 2025

In war and Refuge Darfuri Women…

In Sudan's embattled Darfur region, aid groups say sexual abuse is a constant threat to women, but r ...
February 7, 2025

Uyghur Historian Sentenced Again – This…

Uyghur historian Tursunjan Hezim, the founder of the Orkhun website, which archived a vast collectio ...
January 29, 2025

Rohingya Recount Horrors of Being Kidnapped,Forced…

About 740,000 Rohingya fled Rakhine and settled in Bangladesh refugee camps in the months that follo ...
November 13, 2024

Relatives Grieve Those Lost a Year…

Israel's last year of war has had an impact on everyone.In the wake of the October 7 Hamas attack, m ...
October 7, 2024

Other Article

News & Views

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026
Pick of the Day

Press Briefing on Humanitarian Situation in…

Edem Wosornu, Director of the Crisis Response Division in the Office for the Coordination of Humanit ...
Bizzare News

Texas Woman Sentenced to Six Years…

After pleading a guilty plea to mailing synthetic cannabinoids and other drugs into facilities run b ...
April 10, 2026
Pet Corner

Coton de Tulear Dogs Breed

The Coton de Tulear is a small white dog breed that originated in Madagascar and is named after the ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Discretionary Access Control (DAC)

With discretionary access control (DAC), the owner of an object has the authority to decide who can ...
Pick of the Day

Press Briefing on Launch of Financing…

Li Junhua Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs, and Shari Spiegel , Director of t ...

Top