The Cathedral of St. Joseph of Nazareth in Toluca, Mexico, is seen illuminated on November 2023 for the "Red Wednesday" initiative as part of the Aid to the Church in Need commemoration for persecuted Christians. In 2026, Red Wednesday will be observed Nov. 18. (OSV News photo/courtesy ACN)
ishtartv.com –catholicreview.org
March 9, 2026
By Junno Arocho Esteves
The Vatican’s permanent observer
to the United Nations in Geneva called on governments and international
organizations to strengthen religious freedom protections for persecuted
Christians.
Addressing participants at a
March 3 event, Archbishop Ettore Balestrero, the Holy See’s U.N. permanent
observer in Geneva, said that nearly 400 million Christians around the world
“face persecution or violence, making them the most persecuted religious community
in the world.”
“This means that one in seven
Christians is affected. Even worse, almost 5,000 Christians were killed for
their faith in 2025, which equates to an average of 13 per day,” he said.
According to a March 5 press
release by the Vienna-based Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination
against Christians, or OIDAC, the meeting, titled “Standing with Persecuted
Christians – Defending the Faith and Christian Values,” was the first time “that
a state-sponsored side event at the Human Rights Council specifically addressed
persecution and discrimination against Christians.”
“The event, held during the 61st
session of the Council, brought together diplomats, experts and civil society
representatives to raise awareness about global Christian persecution and
religious freedom challenges in Western countries,” the OIDAC said.
The Vatican diplomat was among
several panelists who addressed the event, including Anja Tang, director of
OIDAC; Nazila Ghanea, U.N. special rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief;
Marie-Thérèse Pictet-Althann, ambassador of the Sovereign Order of Malta; and
Márk Aurél Érszegi, special adviser for religion and diplomacy of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Hungary.
Archbishop Balestrero’s address
echoed similar warnings by Open Doors International, a global advocacy
organization for persecuted Christians, in its “World Watch List 2026”
published in January.
The report, which measures the
severity of Christian persecution in some 50 countries, stated that an
estimated 388 million Christians worldwide experienced “high levels of
persecution and discrimination for their faith.”
Citing Pope Leo XIV’s address in
January to diplomats accredited to the Holy See, Archbishop Balestrero said the
worrying figures showed that “religious freedom is considered in many contexts
more as a ‘privilege’ or concession rather than a fundamental human right.”
“For Christians, those who were
killed for their faith are ‘martyrs’ in the etymological sense of the word:
‘witnesses’ to their creed who embody values that challenge the logic of
power,” he said. “While from the perspective of international law, they are
victims of outrageous human rights violations.”
Governments, he continued, have a
“fundamental responsibility” to protect religious freedom and that authorities
must prevent violations and protect believers before, during, and after
attacks.
However, the Vatican diplomat
lamented that among the most serious issues surrounding religious persecution
is the lack of accountability for those who commit violence against or
persecute Christians.
“Impunity remains one of the most
serious issues in the global landscape of religious persecution,” he said. “A
state should promote freedom of religion or belief, first and above all because
it is a fundamental human right.”
The archbishop also highlighted
data from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, or OSCE,
which reported that in 2024, an estimated 764 anti-Christian hate crimes,
including assaults, vandalism and arson attacks against churches were recorded
in Europe.
However, he also warned that
persecution is not always violent or easily measured. Christians, he explained,
can face “a kind of ‘polite persecution'” that includes a “gradual
marginalization and exclusion from political, social and professional life, even
in traditionally Christian lands.”
He also warned that Christians in
Europe have faced persecution for praying near abortion facilities, citing the
Bible on social issues or expressing religious beliefs in regard to sexual
ethics.
Archbishop Balestrero also warned
that, if passed, a proposed euthanasia bill currently being discussed in France
would force Christian hospitals and care homes to either provide such services
or face fines, prison sentences and lose public funding.
“This threat could become a
reality in a number of countries seeking to legalize euthanasia,” he said.
“These are not superficial acts.
They are serious violations of the rights of Christians, perpetrated by the
very authorities who are charged with the duty of respecting, protecting and
promoting the human rights of all. This contradiction must end,” the archbishop
said.
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