Monday, December 3, 2012

Open Doors News: Syrian Christians targeted for their politics or their faith?


Syria – Christians targeted for their politics or their faith?

Incidents of anti-Christian violence appear to increase as war intensifies

DAMASCUS, Syria, 29 Nov, 2012 (Open Doors News) — Wednesday 28th’s twin deadly car bombs in the Christian and Druze suburb of Jaramana in the Syrian capital Damascus appeared to target two communities which so far have not joined the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad's government.  State media said "terrorists" were behind the blasts which killed at least 38 and injured at least 83; the government says it is protecting these two minorities from "terrorist extremists". The location was not near any strategic targets such as military or government buildings. However, the area is known for its loyalty to President Assad’s government, making it a target for armed opposition groups. No group has yet claimed responsibility.

These are not the first attacks in Jaramana to have been blamed on those seeking to overthrow the government. But in the past, the armed opposition has denied any involvement and repeatedly said it is targeting Mr Assad's forces and not minority groups.

Syria appears to be heading towards deepening breakdown, with sectarian fragmentation likened to its neighbour Lebanon’s civil war. Inevitably, Christians have been caught up in the chaos over the past months, as we report here - starting with a Syrian Orthodox priest who was deliberately killed.

In an act of courage 43 year old Father Fadi Haddad set off by car to negotiate the release of one of his parishioners, who had been kidnapped. A week later, it became clear that the parish priest from Qatana, some 20 kilometers south-west of Damascus, had paid the highest price. On Oct. 25th, his lifeless and mutilated body was found on the side of a road. Qatana had been terrorized by radical fighters, locals told Catholic Charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN). “‘Extremists went through the streets shouting ‘Alawites to the grave, Christians to Beirut’. They want to kick us out”. A pastor who often provided Haddad with Bibles and who met him a few days before he was kidnapped told us ‘Father Fadi’s superiors had asked him why he kept traveling back and forth between Qatana and Damascus. He responded: ‘I cannot not serve Jesus, I need to help people, that is why I have to move around.’

Christians in Syria say the particularly gruesome death of Father Fadi - his eyes had been gouged out - marks a turning point for them. Before, Christians were caught up in the war in the same way as Kurds, Druze, and all other ethnic groups. Also, a part of the Christian community in Syria has been actively supporting President Assad, thus being an actor in the civil war.

But some Syrian Christians say a series of incidents recently points to a trend of violence against Christian civilians, including priests. Particularly worrying, they say, is the growing presence of foreign radical Islamic fighters in the country, and the many Islamist brigades within the opposition Free Syrian Army. Yet there is fear of government forces as well. On Nov. 14, four missiles struck the Christian village of Tel Nasri in northeast Syria. St. Mary’s Church was severely damaged, as were many houses. As the Assyrian International News Agency reports, a 14-year old boy was killed and many were wounded, apparently by Assad’s fighter planes, though that is not confirmed. 

Before that, on Oct. 21st, a car bomb exploded near the gate of Bab Touma, the historical Christian neighbourhood in Damascus. The car was parked next to two churches, a Maronite and a Latin church in Bab Touma street, which emerges into ‘the straight street’ mentioned in the Bible. The explosive detonated at a time when local Christians were heading to church for Sunday Mass. At least 10 people were killed and more than 16 injured. While the nearby police station may have been the target, the timing of the explosion meant that churchgoers would be hurt.

Also, another bomb is said to have been found before it detonated near two churches in the residential district.

The two churches were warned and they told all their parishioners to go home, in case the authorities were unsuccessful in disabling the bomb.

A month before this week’s twin car bombs, on Oct. 29, a bomb in Jaramana killed 11 people and wounded 69. Except for one victim, all belonged to the Christian part of the population. On Sep. 3rd a car explosive took the lives of at least 5 residents of the same locality. A clear distinction is often hard to make between violence specifically aimed at Christians on the one hand, and on the other hand the reality of war which Christians, like other groups, get caught up in. Christian support and aid agency Open Doors received a letter from a Christian in Aleppo, telling about a hundred insurgents who came into the Christian area and infiltrated a main street. The Syrian army quickly retook the zone and no lives were lost. Many Christians in war zones left their houses behind and are staying elsewhere with family- like their Muslim neighbours. That is how much of the city of Homs became a ghost town. But 84-year old Elias Mansour refused to leave and on October 30th, the war took his life. He was the last Christian in Homs, as media worldwide reported.

Maybe less devastating but of high symbolic value are the stories about destroyed, battered or desecrated churches. In Homs and Aleppo, and many other cities and towns, historical church buildings have been damaged as a result of the war.

There are two more reasons why Syrian Christians may find themselves targeted at this lawless time, beyond the indiscrimination of a country at civil war. First, Christian communities in Syria don’t arm themselves in any organized way, which makes them vulnerable to criminal groups. This is particularly the case in those regions where the police and the military are almost absent due to war efforts elsewhere in the country. On July 19th, Staefo Malke was trying to make some extra money for his family as a taxi driver. When several men got into his car and started arguing about the deal they wanted to make with him, a row started. Knowing he was a Christian and not protected by any police or armed group, they shot him dead on the spot, as a family member told Dutch public radio. The same principle may have been applied on Sep 25th to 150 - 240 unarmed Greek-Catholics who were kidnapped from their village of Rableh, and released the next day.

Second, many Syrian Christians are relatively prosperous and are considered to have family in the West – making them an attractive objective for kidnapping for money. In the case of an Assyrian Christian from the Aleppo area, his family paid a lot of money before he was dropped off in a deserted area, alive but in shock. He and his wife and children then joined the 400,000 plus refugees from Syria, according to latest figures from the UNHCR, including at least 150,000 in Turkey.

END

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Copyright 2012 Open Doors News

Twelve Sentenced for Involvement in 2008 Orissa , India Violence

By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

SURREY, ENGLAND (ANS) -- A fast-track court has sentenced 12 people to six years imprisonment for their involvement in the communal violence in Orissa's Kandhamal district in 2008.

According to a report by the Press Trust of India (PTI), the judge also fined the defendants 5,000 rupees in connection with arson, rioting and the torching of houses in Jarkinaju village, near Raikia, on Aug. 25 2008.

The court ordered that non-payment of the fine would result in an additional one year jail term.

According to a news release from human rights organization Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), ten others who had been accused in the case were acquitted due to lack of evidence.

Communal violence against Christians broke out in Kandhamal district in Aug. 2008. CSW said it followed the assassination of local Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) figurehead Swami Lakshmananda Saraswati and four of his followers by Maoist insurgents.

It was the worst single outbreak of anti-Christian violence in the history of post-independence India, and caused at least 90 deaths and the displacement of an estimated 54,000 people.

CSW said the overwhelming majority of cases relating to the 2008 violence have either been dismissed or have resulted in acquittals, including many murder cases. Human rights activists working in the area continue to decry what they call significant flaws in the justice system.

Dr John Dayal, a Member of the Government's National Integration Council (NIC) who has visited Kandhamal regularly, said in the news release, "Justice must be done, and must be seen to be done. The aggregate of justice in the fast-track courts in Kandhamal does not inspire a sense of confidence and closure among the victims."

Dayal added, "Many killers are roaming free, and a member of the Legislative Assembly is at large after his conviction, because the courts seem to think he is too important to be incarcerated."

David Griffiths, CSW South Asia Team Leader, said in the news release, "Any convictions in Kandhamal mark a step forward, and credit must also be given to the human rights defenders providing essential legal aid to victims and witnesses. However, we continue to urge the state administration in Orissa to fight against the prevailing impunity, because the victims deserve justice, and because the rule of law is the essential foundation for peace."

Christian Solidarity Worldwide works for religious freedom through advocacy and human rights, in the pursuit of justice.

For further information, visit www.csw.org.uk.

Chinese Christian Who Helped Hundreds of North Koreans Escape Unable to Get Political Refugee Status from UN (VIDEO)


BANGKOK, Thailand, Nov. 29, 2012 /Christian Newswire/ -- A Chinese Christian who helped hundreds of North Koreans escape to Thailand and then was forced to escape there himself has been waiting for two years for the United Nations to grant him political asylum.

ChinaAid recently received Tu Ai-rong's video appeal for help. In the video below, he tells his story of how he helped 300 to 400 North Koreans escape from the city of Kunming in southwest China's Yunnan province to neighboring Thailand. When China's state security discovered what he was doing, Tu was arrested, sentenced to three years' imprisonment and fined $30,000. He was abused while in prison, and continued to be threatened by government agents after his release. Six month later, in 2009, he fled to Cambodia and Laos. In October 2010, he arrived in Thailand where he applied to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees for political asylum.

Video: Tu Ai-rong's appeal for help

Not only has Tu been waiting in vain for the past two years for political asylum, his situation has become even more grave because the Chinese government has issued a warrant for his arrest. Tu could face a 20-year prison term if he were arrested again by the Chinese authorities. Meanwhile, his family has had to rely on the Korean church for help and face a precarious future.

ChinaAid urges the UNHCR, to approve as soon as possible, Tu's application for international refugee asylum status for him and his family because they meet the requirements for political refugee status. At the same time, ChinaAid calls on the international community, especially the Korean church, to come to the aid of Tu and his family, either by supporting his case or providing much-needed financial assistance.

To advocate for Tu and his family, contact the UNHCR viawww.unhcr.org/pages/4a324fcc6.html.

To provide financial assistance, contact ChinaAid.

In 2009, ChinaAid reported on the 10-year sentence given to two Chinese Christians who had helped North Koreans escape. See the report here:www.chinaaid.org/2009/09/christian-sentenced-to-10-years-in.html
Christian Newswire

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Iranian Conservative Media Mocks God in Caricature Photo

By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

IRAN (ANS) -- The Iranian Revolutionary Guard backed news agency, Fars, has published a caricature of the concept of God!

Satellite controlled assassination of commander of Al-Qassam militants.
According to a story by Mohabat Iranian News, this caricature is called "Satellite controlled assassination of commander of Al-Qassam militants."

The caricature, published on Nov. 19, illustrates the recent Gaza conflicts.

Mohabat News said the basis for the caricature is the "Creation of Man" painting by Michelangelo.

Mohabat News commented, "It seems the caricaturist had either not seen the Michelangelo painting or not fully comprehended its true meaning. (That's) ... because in the caricature, Israel is given a position equal to God, speaking of the Michelangelo painting."


Michelangelo's Creation of Man.
Mohabat News continued to say that the "Creation of Man" is all about giving life, while the image put in the place of God in the caricature is basically taking lives."

Mohabat News further commented, "When someone decides to use the idea of another artist in their work, they are expected to study its meaning before applying the idea. If such a caricature had been published in a pro-reformists' media, everyone would have gone against them saying they had insulted God. But since this is published in a conservative media, no one dares to say anything."

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

International Criminal Court (ICC) Determines that Boko Haram Attacks in Nigeria Constitute 'Crimes Against Humanity'

Boko Haram is sometimes described as the 'Nigerian Taliban'

By Dan Wooding, who was born in Nigeria
Founder of ASSIST Ministries

FAIRFAX, VIRGINIA (ANS) -- Jubilee Campaign and the Christian Association of Nigerian Americans (CANAN) --www.cananusa.org - has told the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net) that it welcomes the status report just released by the International Criminal Court (ICC) Office of the Prosecutor on their preliminary investigation on Nigeria.
Boko Haram members
"We especially applaud the clear recognition of the pernicious role the 'Salafi-jihadist' group Boko Haram has played in the violence, which has wracked Nigeria over the past few years," said a spokesperson for Jubilee Campaign (www.jubileecampaign.org).
"The report should be an encouragement to the thousands of families traumatized by Boko Haram's activities, which have claimed an estimated 3,000 lives in the last three years and imperiled the hopes of Africa's largest country."
The ICC's Prosecutor clearly found that Boko Haram has "attacked religious clerics, Christians, political leaders, Muslims opposing the group, members of the police and security forces, "westerners", journalists, as well as UN personnel. The group has also been accused of committing several large- scale bombing attacks against civilian objects, including deliberate attacks against Christian churches and primary schools."
The ICC's Prosecutor concluded that these attacks, along with Boko Haram's calls for genocide, amount to crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute, i.e. "(i) murder under article 7(1)(a) and (ii) persecution under article 7(1)(h) of the Statute."
"As we approach the 9th year of Boko Haram's violent attacks, which began on Christmas Eve 2003, we hope that this report will galvanize the global community to work together to bring a speedy end to the violence," added the Jubilee Campaign spokesperson.
Jubilee Campaign and Representatives from the Nigerian Christian Community; Presenting Information to the ICC Earlier This Year
"We commend the current Prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, for personally traveling to Nigeria and making a strenuous effort to bring clarity to the situation. We appreciate the efforts to more robustly engage with human rights groups, fact finders, and members of civil society.
"We call on all people of good will in Nigeria to set aside their differences, including the past grievances stemming from sectarian violence, and rally around the common threat of terrorism.
"We call on the relevant state and federal actors to fully investigate and effectively prosecute all acts of terror and sectarian violence, as such prosecutions are a necessary part of building true peace between communities.
"We call on the international community, including the United States, to formally designate Boko Haram as a terrorist organization and implement necessary sanctions and protocols to bring a swift end to the murder and persecution on this massive scale, which the ICC now recognizes as amounting to crimes against humanity.
"We call on the ICC to move promptly to the 3rd phase of its preliminary examination. As the phase 3 process evaluates the viability of national attempts to prosecute Boko Haram, Nigerian authorities should fully cooperate and make all reports and past investigations available to the ICC.
"Finally we remember the victims of Boko Haram from Nigeria, Norway, Kenya, India, Germany, Italy, Great Britain, China, Cameroon, and Mali and assure them that humanity will hold their killers accountable -- they are not forgotten."
Jubilee Campaign USA is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization based in Fairfax, Virginia, and their phone number is:703-503-0791 and e-mail: jubilee@jubileecampaign.org
Note: According to an Irish group, Church in Chains (www.churchinchains.ie/node/487), Boko Haram was formed in 2002 by Sheikh Mohammed Yusuf in Maiduguri, capital of the north-eastern Nigerian state of Borno. Originally formed to fight against government corruption and economic disparities between the north and the richer south, its aim now is to overthrow the government, create an Islamic state and impose strict sharia law. Borno, where Boko Haram has its base, is one of twelve northern states in which sharia is already in force. Christians are supposed to be exempt, but are often forced to comply.
After Mohammed Yusuf died in police custody on July 31, 2009, allegedly in an extra-judicial execution, Boko Haram declared jihad on the government, and they reportedly formalized links with Al Qaeda of the Islamic Maghreb in June 2010. Since then, Boko Haram has been sending militants to Somalia for military training under al-Shabaab, which is linked to al-Queda.
Victims of Boko Haram
Boko Haram is sometimes described as the "Nigerian Taliban". It promotes a version of Islam that forbids Muslims from taking part in any political or social activity associated with Western society, including voting in elections, wearing shirts and trousers or receiving a secular education. Loosely translated from the Hausa language, Boko Haram means "western education is forbidden".
Its official name is Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'awati wal-Jihad, Arabic for "people committed to the propagation of the Prophet's teachings and jihad". It targets not just Christians but also non-fundamentalist and non-jihadist institutions including universities, the police, secular courts and even liberal mosques. The secretary-general of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, Dr Abdulateef Adegbite, has said that Muslim leaders do not support the activities of Boko Haram.
Boko Haram has been responsible for most of the recent attacks on Christians in Nigeria, although some violent attacks in remote rural areas have involved other Islamists, such as Fulani Muslim herdsmen. Boko Haram was responsible for Nigeria's first suicide bombing, on June 16, 2011, when eight people were killed and dozens wounded at Police Headquarters in the federal capital, Abuja. On August 26, 2011, another Boko Haram suicide bombing in Abuja, at the UN headquarters, killed 25 people. While some attacks such as these have been on government institutions, many more have been on churches, and Christians are suffering so much persecution at the hands of Boko Haram in northern Nigeria (which is predominantly Muslim) that thousands have fled to the Christian-majority south.
On March 4, 2012, Boko Haram announced a "war" on Christians and said it would launch a series of coordinated attacks in order to annihilate the entire Christian community in northern Nigeria. A spokesman said, "We are going to put into action new efforts to strike fear into the Christians of the power of Islam by kidnapping their women."
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, himself a Christian, has admitted that there are Boko Haram sympathizers in the government, security agencies and judiciary. (BBC, Compass Direct News, Guardian, Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin).

Hate preacher issues Fatwa against brave Malala Yousafzai

Shot Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai should be sentenced to death says Muslim extremist 

By Dan Wooding
Founder of ASSIST Ministries

BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND (ANS) -- She has won millions of supporters across the world for her brave fight for girls to be educated in Pakistan.
Malala Yousufzai at Birmingham's QE Hospital (Photo: Birmingham Mail)
But Malala Yousafzai's campaign has caused her to become a target for twisted Muslim extremists.
"She was shot in the head by the Taliban as she sat on a bus in the Swat Valley, in northern Pakistan, following her lessons on October 9," wrote investigative journalist, Amardeep Bassey, in a story run on the Birmingham Mail website (www.birminghammail.co.uk).
"Now banned hate preacher Sheikh Omar Bakri is set to issue a fatwa against her at a conference at the Lal Masjid (red mosque) in Islamabad on Friday."
The writer said that The Taliban claimed that her "crime" was to call for girls to have a right to attend school, added, "Security around the brave teenager is expected to be tightened even further as a result of the fatwa."
Malala is currently recovering at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, where she is receiving specialist care after a bullet was removed from her spine. She is currently in a stable condition.
Sheikh Omar Bakri (Photo: Birmingham Mail)
Bakri, dubbed the "Tottenham Ayatollah" is set to officially issue the fatwa against her in front of British extremists via videolink from Lebanon.
Speaking to the Sunday Mercury newspaper in Birmingham from the Lebanese capital Beirut, Bakri said: "Malala is a traitor to Islam because of her attitude and failure to behave like a good Muslim.
"The Taliban were right to try to punish her because death is the ultimate punishment for apostasy, for regressing from Islam, and that applies to males or females."
"Malala is mature Islamically, she is not immature, she has reached that period we say is adulthood so she is responsible for her actions and any consequences.
"Ideally she should face an Islamic court which would most likely sentence her to death under Sharia law which is the only law a Muslim should recognize."
The Islamabad conference billed as "Sharia4Pakistan".
Posters for the event feature pictures of Bakri under the title "Declaration of Fatwa on Malala Yousafzai".
Bakri continued: "The fatwa against Malala is an edict which should be adhered to by every Muslim who becomes aware of it. It is their duty to follow the instructions wherever they may be in the world.
"These are not my personal views. I am only applying Allah's law which calls for death to apostates. If you want to accuse Allah of incitement then that is out of my hands."
Malala Yousufzai with her father, Ziauddin, at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital (Photo: Birmingham Mail)
The writer said that Bakri's London-based side-kick Anjem Choudary, who is also speaking at the conference, added: "There is no covenant of security in Pakistan for non-Muslims. If someone apostasises (renounces) Islam they become like the non-Muslims.
"They no longer have any form of protection."
Celebrities including Madonna and Angelina Jolie have joined millions of people across the world to support Malala.
There are growing calls for her to be considered for the Nobel Peace Prize.
"And the president of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari has been presented with a petition with more than one million signatories urging him to make education available to all children irrespective of gender," wrote Amardeep Bassey.
"The huge document was delivered by former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, in his role as UN Special Envoy for Global Education."
The Taliban attack on Malala Yousafzai has highlighted the issue of education for girls around the world (Photo: Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images)
Malala was only 11 when she started documenting how difficult it was to get an education in the Swat Valley: "I dreamt of a country where education would prevail," she wrote.
Her anonymous blog, first published by BBC Urdu, documented Taliban atrocities committed in Pakistan's Swat Valley and saw the schoolgirl receive international praise.
"Last week it emerged she may make the UK her permanent home after her father Ziauddin Yousafzai was offered a job in Birmingham by the Pakistani government," the story continued.
Syrian-born Bakri, aged 52, was banned from Britain in 2005 after he caused outrage by blaming the 7/7 bombings on the public and Government. He fled to Lebanon and was refused entry back into the UK where he lived for 20 years.