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Church Building in Cuba Demolished, Re-Openings Blocked

Authorities in Cuba have demolished a church building and are blocking other churches from re-opening after the lifting of pandemic restrictions, sources said.

Having demolished an Assemblies of God building in the Abel Santa Maria area outside Santiago de Cuba on the southeastern part of the island, officials are blocking church services from taking place, the Rev. Julio C. Sánchez, secretary general of the Assemblies of God in Cuba, said in a letter seeking prayer and solidarity from other Christian leaders.

“Today the government is blocking the re-opening of some of our temples that we closed due to the pandemic, based on the argument that they’re illegal, when 90 percent of our churches are illegal because they don’t offer us a pathway for making them legal,” Pastor Sánchez said.

Turning their backs on months of negotiations with Assemblies of God officials in Cuba, authorities began demolishing the Assemblies of God Pentecostal Church building outside Santiago de Cuba on Oct. 30, according to  source. The church obtained legal status, and thus the right to negotiate with officials, before the onset of the regime of Fidel Castro in 1959 halted legalizing new churches. Christian leaders say the government uses negotiations with legal churches to put up a false image of religious rights.

“The eastern provincial government of Santigao de Cuba is demolishing one of our temples, that of Abel Santa Maria in Santiago de Cuba,” Pastor Sánchez said. “After several months of dialogue with the government, all efforts have been unfruitful. The reality is that this fact is part of a government campaign against the church, because we have made a front against its agenda of establishing gender ideology and other laws openly contrary to Christian principles.”

Accusations against evangelicals in state-controlled media are constant and growing, portraying them as extremist, homophobic, anti-development and used by anti-government groups, he added.

The government justified the demolition with an assertion that the land was needed for the laying of a pipe for the rehabilitation of a cement plant, which would also entail relocating people from homes in its path, but reports suggests that no one has been relocated and no area houses have been demolished.

To demolish the sanctuary, police who arrived early in the morning had to remove more than 30 Christians who had gathered there to pray, and they did not hesitate to use violence, told Alaín Toledano Valiente, a pastor with the unregistered Apostolic Movement who showed up in solidarity with the congregation. Police arrested him and two others.

“I began transmitting directly to Facebook so that the world would know what was happening, and for this reason they arrested me,” the outlet quoted Pastor Toledano as saying. “We were more than nine hours incarcerated in the third unit of the Police of Santiago de Cuba, and we were subjected to interrogations and threats.”

Authorities detained Assemblies of God pastor Palomo Cabrera and Regional Superintendent José Martínez the morning of November the 2nd, and put them under pressure to sign a document saying that the demolition was legal, according to sources.

In the Arroyo Naranjo municipality, officials on November the 10th,  ordered Assemblies of God leaders to evacuate the denomination’s church building in the Palma community within 24 hours, sources said.

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