Trump says China may free Pastor Ezra Jin

Summary

Trump said Xi told him China was considering releasing Pastor Ezra Jin after this week’s U.S.-China summit.

Why this matters

The case has become part of broader U.S.-China tensions over religious freedom and human rights. Any release would signal how those issues are being handled in high-level talks between Washington and Beijing.

President Trump said Friday that China was considering releasing Pastor Ezra Jin of Beijing’s Zion Church after this week’s U.S.-China summit.

Speaking to reporters, Trump said Chinese President Xi Jinping told him he was “giving very serious consideration to the pastor.”

Jin’s detention has drawn attention from religious freedom groups, which said China had increased pressure on independent Christian worship outside state control.

In October, Secretary of State Marco Rubio called for the “immediate release” of Jin and other church leaders in a social media post.

Zion Church is among the largest underground, or house, churches not registered with Chinese authorities. Such churches operate outside government rules, requiring believers to worship in registered congregations.

Religious freedom groups, Christian organizations, and human rights advocates urged Trump to raise the issue in talks with Xi. Those groups also cited broader Chinese government actions affecting underground Christian churches, Uyghur Muslims, Tibetan Buddhists, and other religious communities.

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