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President Paul Kagame of Rwanda at the United Nations General Assembly in New York last month.CreditCreditDave Sanders for The New York Times |
By Carlos Mureithi
NAIROBI, Kenya — An American missionary who ran a
conservative evangelical church and radio station in Rwanda was arrested in
Kigali, the country’s capital, on Monday before he could hold a news conference
to denounce the government for clamping down on churches like his.
The Rev. Gregg Schoof is one of several outspoken
evangelical pastors who have criticized the Rwandan government for allowing
access to abortion and birth control, and for teaching evolution. He was
detained for attempting to hold a news conference without permission said
Modeste Mbabazi, spokesman for the Rwanda Investigation Bureau.
Mr. Schoof moved his
family from Indiana to Rwanda 16 years ago, nearly a decade
after the genocide that
killed as many as one million people. He established a Baptist church and
Amazing Grace Christian Radio. But the government of President Paul Kagame last
year revoked his station’s license and shut down his church, and recently
refused to renew visas for Mr. Schoof and his family, Mr. Schoof said.
“I did not come here to fight the government. I came to
preach the Gospel,” Mr. Schoof said in a statement he brought to what he had
billed as a final news conference. “But this government has taken a stand
against God with its heathen practices.”
The Rwandan government has been conducting a broad
crackdown on the country’s religious institutions, closing
thousands of churches and dozens of mosques, often accusing
them of failing to comply with building safety standards. Many of the shuttered
churches are small Pentecostal groups that meet in tents or flimsy buildings,
and some preach a brand of so-called prosperity gospel that encourages
worshipers to donate beyond their means.
Pastors who protested the closures have been arrested,
and human rights advocates have accused Mr. Kagame of violating religious
rights and free expression.
Rwanda’s telecommunications regulator revoked the license
of Mr. Schoof’s radio station in 2018 after it had aired a sermon in which a
pastor was heard denigrating women, by calling them evil, the regulator said.
Rwanda has exerted strong control over the media since the 1994 genocide, which
was partly incited by inflammatory radio broadcasts.
Mr. Schoof took the matter to court, but he said that the
case has not been heard. In his statement, Mr. Schoof said that the pastor’s
sermon about “evil” women had been taken out of context. He said the pastor had
been preaching about bad churches — not bad women — and that the local media
had parroted the government’s mischaracterization.
On Monday, Mr. Schoof had planned to give a news
conference, issuing a news release saying he would “update all about the radio
being closed, court cases, and other things.” But the manager of the bar where
he planned to speak asked him to show government authorization to hold the
meeting, and he didn’t provide it, a police spokesman John Kabera told a local
newspaper, The New Times.
Mr. Kabera said in an interview with The New York Times
that Mr. Schoof “was arrested for disturbing public order.”
Mr. Schoof could not be reached for comment.
In the statement he was planning to read for the press,
Mr. Schoof faulted the government for closing churches and his radio station,
arresting pastors, teaching evolution, allowing abortion and distributing
condoms to young people.
He wrote, “Is this government trying to send people to
hell?”
Until last year, Rwanda imprisoned women accused of
having abortions. But a law passed last year allowed abortion in cases of rape,
forced marriage, incest, or when the pregnancy posed a health risk to the
mother. Earlier this year, Mr. Kagame ordered the release of nearly 400 women and girls who had
been jailed for having or aiding in abortions.
Mr. Schoof said he and his family planned to move to
Kampala, Uganda, this month. On Monday night, the minister was still in
custody, the spokesman for the Rwanda Investigation Bureau said.
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