- Baptist Press - https://www.baptistpress.com -

Correlation between persecution and corruption explored

[1]

Nations identified as some of the worst persecutors of Christians also have some of the most corrupt governments, a new study by International Christian Concern [2] asserts.

Afghanistan, Myanmar, Nigeria and North Korea are just a few of the nations that demonstrate a clear correlation between the persecution of religious minorities – particularly Christians – and internal corruption, “Corruption and Christian Persecution [3]” by ICC Fellow Lisa Navarrette maintains.

Navarrette’s report compares those nations ICC has identified as the worst countries for Christian persecution since 2021 and the Corruption Perceptions Index scores assigned to those countries by Transparency International [4].

The index ranks 180 countries and territories based on their perceived levels of public sector corruption on a scale of 0 to 100, with 0 as highly corrupt and 100 as extremely clean.

ICC examines corruption and persecution in 14 countries:

“Lowering corruption rates can play a pivotal role in reducing Christian persecution rates by fostering a more just and accountable society,” Navarrette concludes.

“When corruption is minimized, the rule of law is strengthened, ensuring governments properly investigate cases of persecution against Christians and hold perpetrators accountable.

[5]

“Additionally, with improved governance comes greater protection for religious minorities’ rights, including freedom of religion and expression.”

The U.S. Department of State [6] designated six of the 14 nations the report examines – Myanmar (Burma), China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea and Pakistan – as Countries of Particular Concern. The designation is limited to countries where the government engages in or tolerates “systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom.”

The State Department named two other countries the report examines – Algeria and Azerbaijan – to its second-tier Special Watch List.

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom [7] recommended 10 of the 14 countries – Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Myanmar (Burma), China, Eritrea, India, Iran, Nigeria, North Korea and Pakistan – as Countries of Particular Concern. It recommended the remaining four – Algeria, Egypt, Indonesia and Turkey – to its Special Watch List.


This story originally appeared in the Baptist Standard [8].

[9]

[10]