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Christmas vigil prohibited for children. Traffic blocks and shop closures. Ban on display of objects that recall Christmas in university dormitories. These are some of the measures deployed by the local authorities of Baoding, a northern city in the Chinese province of Hebei not far from the capital Beijing.
As a diocese with a long history, a large number of Catholics live in the Baoding area. For this reason, on Christmas Eve this year the police adopted exceptional security measures in the city centre. The authorities announced traffic control in the historic centre of Yuhua Road, where the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, seat of the diocese of Baoding, is located.
No vehicles were allowed to enter the historic centre after 4 pm and buses passing through this area were ordered to reroute. Furthermore, all shops in the area around the church were ordered to close and Christmas sales and promotions were not permitted.
A source living in Baoding confirmed the information and told AsiaNews that police officers were everywhere around the church. Police vehicles were parked near the church and there were also officers in riot gear. All the shops around the church were closed.
The source said that the police prevented parents with children from entering the church. Police told parents to leave the church because it was “unsafe for children as there were too many people inside.” The police were everywhere inside the church, with a heavy atmosphere, in open contrast to the spirit of the celebration.
The atmosphere was also tense in Donglü, whose church is a pilgrimage destination. According to our source, the police have been stationed in the village for a week before Christmas. Donglü is 20 kilometres from Baoding, and is famous for its Madonna of China.
In 1900, Catholics sought refuge in this village during the Boxer Rebellion, the wave of violence against foreigners and Christianity supported by the Qing dynasty. But in Donglü the Boxer group that tried to attack the church was defeated.
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