KATIN, Laos — About 100 local officials, police and villagers put guns to the heads of Christians during their Sunday morning service in a village in Laos in January, forcing them from their worship and homes, according to an advocacy organization.
Human Rights Watch for Lao Religious Freedom (HRWLRF) reported that in Katin village of Ta-Oyl district, Saravan Province, Lao authorities including the village chief, a religious affairs’ official, three district police and a 15-man volunteer unit joined 15 village police officers to force all 48 Christian adults and children of the church to an open field.
Afterward the officials confiscated all personal belongings from 11 homes of Christians and destroyed six of the 11 homes. They also confiscated a pig — equal to six weeks’ salary to the villagers — that belonged to one of the members of the congregation, according to HRWLRF. Unable to cajole the Christians into renouncing Christ with the illegal use of arms, the officials forced them to walk nearly four miles and then left them on the side of a road.




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