Tajikistan: Church Bombing Kills 10

Bomb kills 10 Christians and hospitalizes 39 Dushanbe church members.

Tajikistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs continues to hold three members of the Sonmin Grace Church for interrogation after a fatal bombing in their church 10 days ago, a source in Dushanbe confirmed late last night.

The powerful double explosion during Sunday worship on October 1 killed at least 10 Christians and hospitalized 39 more. Seven members are still in critical condition.

Hours after the blasts left the three-story church complex in shambles, Tajik authorities detained 12 church leaders, holding them overnight Sunday for questioning. Although reportedly eight were released by the following evening, several other church members were arrested the next day.

“Among those (who were) being held in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs were two who are injured but have been denied access to any medical assistance,” one contact in Dushanbe reported. “Women (were) among those detained.”

The detained Christians were “all church members and servants, and are said by the government to be the leading suspects,” another Dushanbe source said.

Although all but two of the Christians had been released by October 9, the number of confirmed detainees rose to three yesterday. The identity of the Christians still under arrest could not be confirmed.

Released church leaders said they were questioned about the actual bombing incident, as to where they had been when it happened, and whether they had seen anything suspicious that day. But they were also interrogated about how and why they had become believers in Jesus, and what plans they had to evangelize others, they said. None of the first eight released reported being beaten.

Under the laws of Tajikistan, anyone put under formal detention must be released after three days, or arrested on specific charges. To date, none of the church leaders arrested for questioning are known to have been charged.

According to a message faxed in Korean out of Dushanbe and obtained by Compass, during the offertory of the Sunday morning service October 1,”some stranger came in and left a bag in one of the pews.” When the bomb hidden in the bag exploded, the fax said, “the roof came down.” A second bomb was timed to go off on the first floor as people tried to flee the building.

Local sources confirmed that the church had been subjected to a number of recent threats, including a letter threatening to kill the pastor and disturb the church services.

Pastor Yun Seop Choi, who was abroad when the fatal bombing occurred, returned to Tajikistan to be reunited with his congregation on October 6.

“Many wept as he walked into the room,” one source commented. “It is obvious these folks love and respect their pastor.”

Permission was granted the same day for former residents to enter the bombed area, where several dozen members of the church had lived together in community. Various groups in the city reportedly took up collections this past weekend to provide food, clothing and other assistance to these families. The Tajik authorities did not allow entrance into the church building itself until October 9.

The list of victims from the bombing ranged in age from 21 to 60, including men and women of Tajik, Tatar-Tajik, Korean-Tajik and Russian backgrounds.

Tajik authorities have restricted access to hospitalized victims of the attack.

Seven severely injured survivors were still listed in critical condition, including two who had sustained burns over two-thirds of their bodies, one 70-year-old lady suffering from cerebral contusion and one believer who had been blinded in both eyes.

“They’ve taken some patients to the police hospital to protect them,” one local source noted. Reportedly, authorities fear that if the attackers learn that certain people survived the bombing, they might try to come and kill them in their hospital beds.

Copyright © 2000 Compass Direct

Related Elsewhere

Read “Deaths in Tajikistan Church Blasts Rise to 7” from the Oct. 2 edition of the People’s Daily.

The BBC also ran a story, “Seven dead in Tajikistan church bombing.”

Copyright © 2000 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Community Is Their Middle Name: Willow Creek Community Church is more than weekend seeker services.

Cover Story

Community Is Their Middle Name

Verla Wallace

Urban Outreach: Baptists Transform Kentucky Tavern

Ken Walker

Trashy Talk

Richard A. Kauffman

Quotations to Contemplate

Furthermore: Nice Is Not the Point

Pie-in-the-Sky Now

Ed Gitre

Rock & Roll Apologetics

Douglas LeBlanc

Neighborhood Outpost

’Gifting Clubs’ Shut Down

Chuck Fager

Downsizing: Prison Fellowship Downsizing

Jody Veenker

Updates

The New Scarlet Letter

Vincent Bacote

Briefs: North America

Left Behind Series Puts Tyndale Ahead

Corrie Cutrer

Eight UMC Pastors Quit Denomination

Corrie Cutrer

India: Justice Delayed for Dalits

Manpreet Singh in Munan Khurd

Briefs: The World

Ready to Stand on Their Own?

Beverly Nickles in Moscow

Indonesia: Ambon's Wounded

Russell Rankin in Ambon

Urbanites: More Justice, Less Epistemology

Carlos Aguilar

Sort of Mellowing

Verla Wallace

The Next 25 Years

Verla Wallace

The Man Behind the Megachurch

Lauren F. Winner

Willow Creek's Place in History

Michael S. Hamilton

Unprepared to Teach Parenting?

Kathleen Terner

The Antimoderns

A forum with Carlos Aguilar, Vincent Bacote, Andy Crouch, Catherine Crouch, Sherri King, and Chris Simmons

What Exactly Is Postmodernism?

Review

Through a Glass Darkly

Jeff M. Sellers

Scientists: Just Leave Us Alone

Catherine Crouch

Policy Wonks for Christ

Lauren F. Winner

Thanksgiving at Fair Acres

Virginia Stem Owens

Lives Measured in Minutes

Sheryl Henderson Blunt

Souls on Ice

Stephen T. Hunt

The Newest Establishment

A Lexicon of Death

A Christianity Today Editorial

No Sympathy for the Devil

A Christianity Today Editorial

View issue

Our Latest

Our Prayers Don’t Disappear into Thin Air

Bohye Kim

Why Scripture talks of our entreaties to God as rising like incense.

From Outer Space to Rome

In 1962, CT engaged friends and enemies in the Cold War and the Second Vatican Council.

May Cause a Spontaneous Outburst of Festive Joy

8 new Christmas albums for holiday parties, praise, and playlists.

Excerpt

Meet CT’s New President

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin and Walter Kim

Nicole Martin seeks to mend evangelical divides and uphold biblical truth.

The Bulletin

Kidnappings in Nigeria, Rep. Greene Resigns, Mamdani Meets Trump

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Persecution in Nigeria, Marjorie Taylor Greene resigns, Mamdani and Trump have a friendly meeting, and listeners give thanks.

Excerpt

You Know Them As Fantasy Writers. They Were Soldiers Too. 

Joseph Loconte

An excerpt from ‘The War for Middle-Earth: J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis Confront the Gathering Storm, 1933–1945.’

Christmas in Wartime

Daniel Darling

How can Christians possibly pause for Advent in a world so dark?

Hold On, Dear Pilgrim, Hold On

W. David O. Taylor

Isaiah speaks to the weary awaiting light in the darkness.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube