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China ‘detains’ Shanghai bishop who quit official post

A newly-ordained bishop is reportedly being held after announcing he was quitting the body that oversees China’s state-sanctioned Catholic Church.

Thaddeus Ma Daqin, Shanghai’s auxiliary bishop, announced his resignation from China’s Patriotic Catholic Association at his ordination mass on Saturday.

Catholic media and other religious sources say he has been confined in a seminary near Shanghai.

There has been longstanding tension between Beijing and the Vatican.

The Vatican, which appointed Bishop Ma, does not recognise the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association (CPCA). The Chinese church in turn rejects the Pope’s authority.

The BBC’s John Sudworth in Shanghai says Bishop Ma appears to have been silenced – his announcement that he intended to resign from the CPCA apparently sent shock waves through the official hierarchy.

China’s estimated 10 million Catholics are split between followers of the Pope and the CPCA.

Reports said Bishop Ma told a 1,000-strong congregation that he was stepping down from the governing body to focus on his new responsibilities. This drew loud applause, said a report in the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post newspaper.

But analysts say the move was seen as a challenge to Chinese state control over Catholic churches and clergy.

Bishop Ma did not return for mass on Sunday and is said to have been taken away to a seminary in Shanghai and forbidden contact with others, according to an Associated Press report, citing Catholic researcher Anthony Lam and the AsiaNews and UCAnews websites.

A close friend of the bishop has told the BBC that Bishop Ma has now been forced to undertake “a period of reflection” in private, and one that might last for months.

“He has chosen belief over freedom,” the friend said.

The vice chairman of the CPA, Liu Bainian, has also said that he is awaiting the results of an investigation into Bishop Ma, according to Hong Kong’s Ming Pao newspaper.

China broke off diplomatic relations with the Vatican in 1951, but in recent years tensions between Beijing and Rome had eased somewhat, with the occasional visit by a senior Vatican cardinal.

Relations suffered a setback in 2010 with the consecration of the first Chinese bishop for almost five years without the approval of Rome.

Last week the Chinese authorities ordained a bishop in the northern city of Harbin without the approval of the Vatican.

For more on this story go to:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-18778655

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