Country Profiles
Map of oppression & persecution of Christians and Country profiles featured in the Persecution and Forgotten? A report of Christians Persecution and Oppression in the World 2015 - 2017 .
- China
Situation: worsened
New regulations led to more churches destroyed and crosses pulled down. Threat of more restrictive legislation. Surveillance has grown. House Churches under increased pressure to conform or disband. - Egypt
Situation: slightly worsened
More than 100 killed in three major attacks and ongoing instances of individual Christians being killed by extremists. - Eritrea
Situation: slightly worsened
Increased government clampdown on Christians, imprisoning those who oppose its increasing control of religious groups.Continuing exodus due to hardships endured by all communities. - India
Situation: worsened
Christians have faced a rising wave of violence, with attacks drastically increasing since the March 2017 elections. 316 incidents were reported in the first five months of 2017. - Iran
Situation: slightly worsened
Escalation in anti-Christian sentiment in media outlets and proliferation of anti-Christian publications. Church experiences land confiscations, visa refusals, targeted surveillance and intimidation tactics. - Iraq
Situation: worsened
Daesh tried to eliminate Chrisitianity in areas under their control, including by destroying churches and forced conversion. Central government legislation prompted fears Christian children could be forced to renounce faith. - Nigeria
Situation: slightly worsened
Rising Fulani attacks have seen Christian villages devastated and many killed. Church reports indicate local government and military collusion in the murder of Christians as well as supplying funding and weapons.
- North Korea
Situation: slightly worsened
Christians convicted are routinely sent to political internment camps where they experienced extra-judicial killing, forced labour, torture, persecution, starvation, rape, forced abortion and sexual violence. - Pakistan
Situation: worsened
Rife discrimination is increasing against Christians – evident in the schools including their textbooks, the workplace where many Christianshave menial jobs, and legal treatment. - Saudi Arabia
Situation: unchanged
Christianity is illegal in Saudi Arabia. State claims tolerance of private worship by non-Muslims – but death penalty for Christian converts from Islam. - Sudan
Situation: worsened
Sudan’s persecution against Christians has increased – with planning laws used as a pretext to destroy churches and Christian-owned buioldings in an attempt to crush Christianity. - Syria
Situation: worsened
Horrific accounts of genocidal atrocities by Daesh during this period have emerged. A disproportionately high number of Christians fled Syria – up to half the Christian population. - Turkey
Situation: worsened
50 Syriac Orthodox Church properties were among buildings seized by the state. Indications of continuing intolerance seen in Islamification of historic Christian sites, eg Hagia Sophia.