Orthodox leader was in solitary confinement for his resistance to government interference in the church.
Abune Antonios, a confined Eritrean Orthodox Church patriarch and the longest-serving prisoner of conscience in the Horn of Africa, died on February 9 at the age of 94.
He was still serving detention in the Eritrean capital, Asmara, after his arrest in 2006 just two years after his installation as the third patriarch of the Eritrean Orthodox Church. For 16 years, he was kept in solitary confinement under the orders of the country’s authoritarian leader, President Isaias Afwerki, for his resistance to government interference in the church.
Eritrea has long been on the US State Department’s list of worst religious liberty violators and was ranked No. 6 in Christian watchdog Open Doors’ 2022 list of where persecution of Christians is worst.
“It is very unfortunate that the patriarch died while in detention. There was no reason for the government of Eritrea to put him in detention,” Francis Kuria, the general of the African Council of Religious Leaders, told RNS on February 11. “The Orthodox Church in Eritrea and elsewhere is always very supportive of the people’s development.”
Archbishop Angaelos of the Coptic Orthodox Church in London announced the patriarch’s death on social media, saying he had passed away after a long battle with illness, noting his battle with injustice had been even longer and more painful. Antonios was buried on February 10 in the capital at a monastery to which he belonged. A large crowd gathered at the burial site, many of whom had traveled long distances on foot, according to reports.
“We pray for repose for his holiness, and comfort and support for #our EritreaOrthodox Sisters and brothers in Eritrea, Britain and around the world,” said ...
from Christianity Today Magazine
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