Officials raid KP Yohannan's Believers Church over accusations of foreign funding

Gospel for Asia founder K.P. Yohannan greets people in Mumbai, India in February 2018. (Photo: Courtesy of Gospel for Asia)

Government agents in India have reportedly raided the offices of Believers Eastern Church and its leader, Bishop K.P. Yohannan, in the Kerala state over accusations that the church network accepted illegal foreign donations and evaded taxes.

However, the church’s United States-based partner ministry also headed by Yohannan, Gospel for Asia, has refuted reports alleging unlawful behavior, calling them “thinly sourced and unsubstantiated.” 

The Hindu reports that India’s Income Tax Department on Thursday raided the offices of Thiruvalla-based Believers Eastern Church, an evangelical denomination planted by the U.S.-based Gospel for Asia in 1993 and now claims nearly 4 million members across 16 countries.

According to the report, the operation began in the morning and continued through the evening. Additionally, other raids were said to have been carried out at the offices and residences of other people associated with the denomination. In addition to the church network’s headquarters, authorities were also said to have raided a medical college hospital operated by the denomination as well as the home of Yohannan. 

According to The Hindu, government officials seized the equivalent of over $77,000 from the trunk of a car parked at the church’s headquarters as well as financial documents. 

Unnamed authorities were quoted as telling the outlet that further details of the case would be shared at a later time. 

India, which is ranked by Open Doors USA as the 10th worst nation in the world when it comes to Christian persecution as it has been led by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party since 2014, has in the last few years revoked the licenses of several Christian organizations to accept foreign donations. 

In 2017, the government stripped Believers Eastern Church and three of its affiliated ministries of their licenses to receive foreign donations under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act.

According to The Hindu, Believers Eastern Church was put on the radar of the government following allegations that the network has received foreign donations through associated nongovernmental organizations. 

In a statement shared with The Christian Post Thursday, Gospel for Asia, which was founded by Yohannan in 1979 to serve the “least of these” in Asia, responded to the Indian news reports. 

“While GFA World is a separate, legal entity operating under U.S. law, and has no offices in India, we have been in touch with our implementation partner in India (Believers Eastern Church) and we understand that most of these reports are based on exaggerated rumors,” the statement reads. 

“This is, they believe, the latest effort in an ongoing smear campaign targeting the ministry by those who are opposed to BEC’s mission in Asia. As an example, there have been attempts by private organizations and mid-level local officials to ascertain church membership rolls and documentation as to when certain individuals joined their Christian community.” 

GFA asserted that Believers Eastern Church “refutes all allegations that there have been any violations of government regulations regarding foreign funding.”

“They have told us they are in compliance with India’s rules and regulations regarding funding and will continue to comply as the law is written."  

GFA suggested that what is happening to Believers Eastern Church is a type of “Christian persecution.” 

“Over the past few years, we have watched as persecution has increased dramatically across the mission field. Jesus Himself told us this would happen in Matthew 10, when He warned believers to expect opposition whenever they go forth in His name. This situation is no different.

“Let’s be clear: there are orchestrated attacks being faced by Christian entities throughout the entire subcontinent, and Believers Eastern Church is no exception."

Since Believers Eastern Church’s ability to legally accept foreign funding has been revoked, questions have been raised by critics of Gospel for Asia about how the donations it solicits to help people in India get to their intended beneficiaries if the government won’t allow foreign funding for the church or its affiliates. 

GFA did not address these questions. 

Other groups that have had their licenses to receive foreign donations revoked is the humanitarian organization Compassion International, which in 2017 was forced to halt its operations in India and abandon over 147,000 sponsor children in the country. 

“It is well known that Compassion International was forced to stop their work in India. We hope that BEC, as a fully-Indian entity, will not face similar challenges," GFA said. “We plead with all believers to join with us in praying for our brothers and sisters in Asia as they walk through this process, and we ask you to pray that the work of the Lord amongst the hurting and broken in our generation would continue more than ever in the days ahead.”

In the past, GFA faced accusations that it mishandled millions of dollars in donations. Although GFA reached a $37 million legal settlement in 2019 related to the allegations of mishandling donations, Yohannan maintains that the group did not act fraudulently. 

Popular preacher Francis Chan came to the defense of Gospel for Asia after doing research and reviewing financial documents to ensure there was no foul play by the group. 

Yohannan touched on the lawsuit in his book, released in April, titled Never Give Up

“It talks about the last few years with the fire, pain and crisis we went through with people accusing us and saying all kinds of things and we don’t know why they did it,” Yohannan told CP in a June interview. 

In April, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom recommended that the U.S. State Department include India on its list of “countries of particular concern” that engage in or tolerate systemic and egregious violations of religious freedom. 

“The majority of the commissioners believe [India] is trending in a very negative direction,” then-USCIRF Chair Tony Perkins said at the time. 

Then-USCIRF Vice Chair Nadine Maenza said that India had perhaps “the steepest and most alarming deterioration of religious freedom conditions” among any country in 2019 as Hindu radical persecution against religious minorities continued. 

Courtesy of The Christian Post