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  • Writer's pictureOrina Ontiri

China arrests aid worker in sign of crackdown on Christian activists

Korean-American Peter Hahn charged with embezzlement after being held in Tumen, near border with North Korea

The school run by Peter Hahn in the city of Tumen, near the China-North Korea border


China has arrested a Korean-American aid worker who was being held near the country’s border with North Korea, in a sign of a crackdown on Christian activistsin the sensitive region.

Peter Hahn, 74, is being charged with embezzlement and counterfeiting receipts, his lawyer, Zhang Peihong, told Reuters.

Zhang said he believed authorities were targeting Hahn because of his Christian faith and because he ran a non-governmental organisation. “The charges levelled against him are just excuses,” h said.

Hahn, who ran a vocational school in the border town of Tumen, had been under investigation for months, along with several colleagues. In an interview last month, Hahn’s wife, Eunice Hahn, said the building that houses the school was a “base camp for our missionaries”.

Eunice Hahn said those under investigation among Hahn’s staff included two US nationals and three South Koreans. Both Zhang and Eunice Hahn said Hahn had helped North Korean defectors more than a decade ago, but he was no longer doing so.

China has long worked to curb the flow of North Koreans who flee persecution and poverty in their homeland and illegally enter China before travelling to other nations, usually ending up in South Korea.

A spokesman for the US embassy said he could not comment. Both Zhang and Eunice Hahn said US consular officials had been able to meet Hahn.

In August, sources told Reuters hundreds of Christian missionaries had been forced out of China, most by having their visas refused, in a far-reaching crackdown. In the same month, China said it was investigating a Canadian Christian couple who ran a coffee shop in Dandong, further south near the North Korean border, on suspicion of stealing state secrets.

China’s foreign ministry confirmed the charges against Hahn, but said he was criminally detained. Zhang said law enforcement authorities in Yanbian prefecture, where Hahn is being held, told him on Friday Hahn had been formally arrested – a more serious status than criminal detention. He said police had been allowing Hahn to see a doctor regularly. Eunice Hahn said her husband had diabetes and had two strokes this year. She said she had asked a US diplomat to deliver a letter to her husband with Christian messages but Hahn had not been allowed to read it.

“I just want to bring this to some sort of conclusion,” she said.

Monitor

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