2 House Church Pastors Shot in Vietnam’s Central Highlands

Reports have surfaced of two independent house pastors being shot in different parts of Vietnam’s Central Highlands in recent months. 

Pastor Y Hung Ayun, 62, and Pastor Y Pho Eban, 57, are part of the Ede people group and lead house churches that are not registered with the Vietnamese communist government. 

Leaders and members of unregistered house groups are often harassed and oppressed by local and central government officials, particularly because they are not part of the government-sanctioned Evangelical Church of Vietnam.

Both pastors have stated they believe the attacks on them are because of their ongoing unregistered church activities. 

Two masked men on a motorbike shot Pastor Ayun with rubber bullets. The bullets have caused severe swelling and damage to his legs. Ayun has previously spent nine years in prison for his religious activities. Since the shooting, police have monitored him closer, and he must now notify authorities if he leaves the area. 

Pastor Eban was shot in the leg as he worked on his coffee plantation. The bullets caused serious wounds, leaving Eban unable to walk. 

Pastor Eban’s case is even more tenuous because his unregistered church has about 200 members and because he is the father of Christian activist Y Quynh Bdap, who is currently facing extradition from Thailand.

Several ministries and NGOs, including International Christian Concern, have reported on Bdap’s situation, especially as he is likely to face an unfair trial, torture, or even death if he is extradited to Vietnam. 

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