Middle East's first ordained female minister denied entry for a trip to the UK over fears she won't return home

Syrian-born Rev Rola Sleiman has been refused a visa for a church visit to the UK. Facebook

The first ordained female Christian minister in the Middle East has been denied a short-term visa to the UK, with the British government fearing she may not leave the country at the end of her trip.

Rev Rola Sleiman, 42, was due to attend the annual gathering of the Church of Scotland – the week long General Assembly due to begin on Saturday – according to The Herald.

Syrian-born Sleiman, who now pastors Tripoli Evangelical Church, was refused a visa for her trip with the Home Office telling her in a letter that it was 'not satisfied you intend to leave the UK at the end of your proposed visit'. It had previously called for verification from the Church, which the Church provided. It has now said it does not believe the Church of Scotland is paying for Sleiman's visit.

Very Rev Dr John Chalmers, principal clerk to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, said the visa refusal was 'disturbing and mystifying'.

He said: 'We have been looking forward to receiving Rev Rola Sleiman as representative of the National Evangelical (Protestant) Church of Syria and Lebanon at the General Assembly.

'She is the first woman to be ordained in the Middle East and became pastor of her own congregation in Lebanon in February this year.

'Her contribution to our discussion on gender justice and on the situation in the Middle East would be of great significance.'

Chalmers said the Church was 'desperately disappointed' by the government's denial and is appealing for a reversal of the decision.

He added: 'Over the years we have invited hundreds of overseas visitors to our General Assembly and this is the first time that our commitment to covering the costs of their stay has ever been questioned.

'We also have a 100 per cent record of our visitors returning to their own country.

'However, time is not on our side and the fact that parliament has been dissolved and MPs are on the campaign trail is making it difficult for us to make headway.

'We remain hopeful that more senior UK government figures will overturn this injustice and allow Ms Sleiman to participate in our General Assembly.'

News
'Being Church in a time of conflict' - Church of England confronts global threats
'Being Church in a time of conflict' - Church of England confronts global threats

Members of the Church of England’s General Synod arrived in York yesterday for five days of deliberation and discussion.  

What does true freedom look like?
What does true freedom look like?

In today’s world, “freedom” is often defined as the ability to act, speak, or think however we want. But Scripture offers a radically different, and far deeper, understanding of freedom.

NHS urged to engage meaningfully with faith groups
NHS urged to engage meaningfully with faith groups

Engagement should be more than "tokenistic", says FaithAction.

Community-led school in South Sudan brings 'spring of hope' during humanitarian crisis
Community-led school in South Sudan brings 'spring of hope' during humanitarian crisis

Fourteen years after gaining independence, a community-driven initiative is igniting hope for a better future through education in South Sudan.