ICC Note:
In a recent crackdown on Christians in Libya, an American Christian was arrested and imprisoned for spreading the Gospel. Three other foreign Christian were rounded up in this same raid. The Libyan government has confirmed that it is set to release the American after more than a month in prison. Libya, which sees the spread of Christianity as a threat to national security, maintains that it has done nothing wrong in this case. More that 40 other Christians have been rounded up in the recent crackdown, many of whom are Egyptian. There is no word whether or when these Christians will be released.Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β
3/28/2013 Libya (Fox News) – An American and three fellow Christians who have been held in jail in Libya, for more than a month for allegedly spreading the gospel will be freed, according to Libyan officials.
The U.S. State Department confirmed the American man, who also holds Swedish citizenship, is being held in Benghazi and has been in contact with U.S. diplomats, but officials declined to identify him. Libyan officials have said all four Christians, who potentially faced the death penalty on the charges, will be freed and deported as a gesture of good will.
The four, who include an Egyptian man and a South Korean man and a woman from South Africa, were arrested just days before a Coptic church in Benghazi was firebombed and a French Catholic priest narrowly escaped being shot in the capital of Tripoli.
Their planned release is being greeted with a collective sigh of relief by Western diplomats in Libya, who feared the quartet could be brought to trial by the Libyan authorities on charges of threatening national security and distributing Christian literature.
βOur worry was that if the authorities had decided to go ahead with a court hearing, then they would have been under pressure from some hardliners to make an example of them,β a European envoy in Tripoli told FoxNews.com.
But the release of the four isnβt easing fears about the prospects for Christians in Libya, which is experiencing a rapid rise in Islamist sentiment. Three communities of Roman Catholic nuns left Libya in recent weeks amid concerns for their security because of threats from radical Islamists.
One of the departing communities — the Congregation of the Holy Family of Spoleto β had worked for nearly a century in the town of Derna, east of Benghazi.
βThe religious sisters felt they had to leave – they felt they were in danger,β Father Dominique said shortly before the last congregation was due to leave last month.
Father Dominique β a former Vatican diplomat who transferred to Tripoliβs St. Francis Cathedral as a retirement mission β insisted the situation in the capital was easier and less threatening than Benghazi and that clergy and lay Roman Catholic staff in the capital didnβt feel under threat.
Sitting in the courtyard garden of the 19th century cathedral, he said: βYou can see that things are fine here.β He acknowledged, however, that the cathedralβs staff kept a low profile and avoided wearing any clerical clothing when leaving the compound.
But just a few days later β on March 2 β militiamen shot at a Tripoli-based Catholic priest in an incident the Vatican said highlighted the danger for Christians in the country.
βThe situation is not good for Christians both in Tripoli and Benghazi,” the Vaticanβs official news agency declared.
The attack was condemned also by the Libyan Foreign Ministry as βcontrary to the laws of Islam and international law.β
Although eager to play down the threats and incidents against Christians in the country, diplomats β and Christian clerics in Libya β say what is unnerving is the involvement of some elements of Libyaβs security agencies, including the Office of Preventative Security, a branch of the Defense Ministry formed in April 2011 after Muammar Qaddafi’s ouster.
It was militiamen from that agency who arrested the four foreign missionaries, claiming they had engaged a local printer to print Christian literature and had more than 50,000 Christian books stored in a warehouse in Benghazi.
The increased tempo of incidents involving Christians also is alarming foreign diplomats. Last autumn, the Italian cemetery in downtown Tripoli began to see regular vandalism of tombs.
“Human bones have been scattered across the cemetery,β caretaker Dalmasso Bruno said.
Christian anxiety mounted in December, when two Egyptian Copts were killed in a bomb blast at a Coptic church in in the Mediterranean town of Dafniya. St. Georgeβs Greek Orthodox Church in Tripoliβs Old City has been targeted and icons burnt.
Then last month, nearly a hundred Copts were swept up in a series of round-ups in Benghazi and charged with proselytizing. After intense negotiations between Cairo and Tripoli, the Copts were released and expelled, but several claimed they had been tortured and one Egyptian died in custody, triggering violent protests in Cairo.
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