Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Death penalty case for two pastors continues in Sudan

The defense presented its case yesterday attempting to refute questionable evidence in the death penalty trial of two South Sudanese pastors charged with spying in Khartoum, Sudan. The defense closed its case having to persuade the judge of the pastors' innocence under a presumption of their guilt.

Having been deprived of access to his clients since June 3rd, defense attorney Mohaned Mustafa called two expert witnesses showing that the evidence presented by the state may have been planted onto Pastor Peter and Pastor Michael's computers by Sudan's National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS).

On July 3rd, the prosecution presented information gleaned from the pastors' laptops as evidence against them, including maps of Khartoum, Sudanese demographic data, internal church reports, and a confidential NISS guide. Mustafa called an information technology specialist as a witness to demonstrate how easy it is to upload the sensitive information onto a computer, especially since NISS has possessed their laptops for five months.

"If somebody took your laptop, they can put the information on it. It is easy to put anything you want on the laptops," Mustafa told International Christian Concern (ICC).

Mustafa's witnesses also included a former Sudanese army general and 2010 presidential candidate Abdul Aziz Khalid, who testified to the public availability of the maps and population data found on the computers. The pastors had religious cause for keeping the church files stored there.

"They are missionaries. This is not a crime in Sudan, but this is not acceptable to the government," Mustafa said.

The Sudanese Constitution states in Article 24: "Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and religion and the right to manifest and disseminate his religion or belief in teaching, practice, or observance. No one shall be coerced to profess faith in which he does not believe or perform rituals or worship that he does not voluntarily accept. This right shall be exercised in a manner that does not harm public order or the feelings of other, and in accordance with the law."

Defense Attorney Barred From Access to Pastors

Mustafa told ICC that NISS violated standard legal procedure in the way the agency handled the evidence, and that the pastors' constitutional rights were being denied.

"From June 3rd, I have had no access to prepare them and even their family.  It is unconstitutional.  It is illegal.  It is a clear violation of their rights," Mustafa said.

The lack of access to their families, especially, has been emotionally trying. Pastor Peter and Pastor Michael have been denied that contact since they were transferred from low security Omdurman Men's Prison to high-security Kober Prison in early June.
The pastors stand charged with six crimes, including undermining the constitutional system, espionage, promoting hatred amongst sects, breach of public peace, and offenses relating to insulting religious beliefs.  The top two charges carry the death penalty or life imprisonment.

Closing arguments will be delivered on July 23rd, and a final decision is expected on August 5th. The pastors have been detained since December and January when they were arrested in connection with a pre-existing land dispute between the Sudanese government and the Khartoum Bhari Evangelical Church.

Despite the seriousness of the charges, Mustafa remains confident. "The evidence itself is not enough to charge them. From the beginning, there was no case," he told ICC. "If the court is fair, the judge will dismiss the case," he added.

The international attention that has mounted and the pressure that concerned people and advocacy organizations have asserted on the Sudanese government appear to have influenced the case. Two representatives from the Sudanese Ministry of Justice as well as representatives from various embassies in Khartoum were present for the latest proceedings, including a representative from the United States.

ICC's advocacy in the case has included partnering with other like-minded organization to co-sign a letter to Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir requesting the release of Pastors Peter and Michael and calling for an end to the persecution of Christians in the country.

ICC's Regional Manager for Africa, Troy Augustine, said, "Pastors Peter and Michael need your prayers more now than ever. Sudan should do the right thing and release them. The court proceedings have proven time and time again that the state's case is non-existent against them. While we remain confident that justice will prevail, we are also appalled that the Sudanese government continues to deny Pastor Peter and Pastor Michael their basic rights of access to their attorney and their families."

Note: The names "Pastor Peter" and "Pastor Michael" are simplified versions of their full names Peter Yein Reith and Yat Michael Ruot, which carry a variety of spellings. The names used in the article were chosen for clarity and consistency.
For interviews, contact Troy Augustine, Regional Manager for Africa: 
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Persecution of Protestants in Mexico

International Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that the United States has questioned Mexico regarding reports of widespread discrimination, violence, and displacement of Protestant Christian communities in Chiapas and several other states. In a private e-mail received by ICC last week, Congressional staff members revealed that Assistant Secretary Roberta Jacobson confirmed the questioning of the Mexican government by State Department officials had taken place during the first week of June.

The news comes as several human rights groups, including International Christian Concern and Christian Solidarity Worldwide - UK (CSW-UK), have launched campaigns aimed at raising awareness of the plight of religious minorities in rural areas of Mexico. Extensive research and investigations conducted by CSW-UK and an April field visit by ICC have uncovered large numbers of cases of religious persecution among rural indigenous communities in Mexico that are often directed towards the Protestant minority. ICC conservatively estimates that more than 70 open cases of religious persecution against minority Christian communities, each involving between 20-100 victims, currently exist in just Chiapas, Hidalgo, Oaxaca, Puebla and Guerrero. In most cases, local authorities appear unwilling to thoroughly address the issue and are occasionally directly complicit in cases of religiously based discrimination. These types of cases, which include cutting off access for minority communities to utilities, public schools, and public cemeteries, land seizures, destruction of property, and physical and sexual assault, have been ongoing for an estimated four decades but have largely gone unnoticed by the international community.   

Last week, ICC received reports of five Protestant Christians, including three children, being detained by local authorities in the village of Tzetelton, Chiapas, for converting to Protestantism. The children were released after a brief detention on July 7 but two adults, Andres Lopez and Virginia Lopez, were jailed for two nights before signing an agreement to pay a fine of 9,500 pesos (approximately $600 USD) and to remove their children from local schools. The agreement was mediated with officials from the state government present and observed by local human rights groups.

On June 1st, ICC launched a campaign aimed at raising awareness about the issue and called on supporters to contact the Mexican government to voice their concerns. Included in the campaign is a petition "calling for the immediate end to violence against and displacement of religious minorities in Mexico." The petition can be found here.

Jeff King, ICC's President, said, "It is time that the Mexican government provides justice and protection for victims of religious persecution while dealing with local and state officials that are part of the problem. A slow wave of religious persecution has been sweeping across Mexico and the culture of corruption and lack of accountability that surrounds religious freedom cases needs to end. A free society cannot flourish when religious persecution exists, and this issue has gone on for far too long while the world has looked the other way.  Every citizen of Mexico has a right to practice their faith without the fear of being driven from their homes simply because of what they believe."
For interviews, contact Isaac Six, Advocacy Director: 
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 3:1

Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made.  And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?

-- Gen. 3:1 (KJV)

This chapter starts off rather weird with a talking serpent.  Where in the world did it come from?  Why is a snake talking to Eve?

Well, the serpent is introduced in Isaiah 14:12-19.  As punishment for rebelling against God, the former archangel known as Lucifer was banished from Heaven to earth.  Along with Lucifer, one-third of the angels followed his lead in the rebellion and were kicked out as well.  (Revelation Chapter 12).

Mankind was created to fill the void of the fallen angels from Heaven.  However, mankind first had to withstand the test by defeating the deception of the serpent.

Look at how the serpent deceives.  He focuses upon the negative.  "Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?"  Instead of focusing upon the unrestricted access mankind possessed in the Garden of Eden, the serpent attempts to sway the focus upon the one tree that they were not supposed to eat from.

We must learn to accentuate the positive in every circumstance.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 3,1,4.  (3) To stay in the Spirit, realize that your adversary is subtle.  (1) To stay in the anointing, choose not to listen to the serpent.  (4) To stay in God's Word, do not agree with the serpent.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Plight in the Levant

"Within minutes, tens of thousands of people fled their homes," Nuri Kino, founder of A Demand for Action, explained to International Christian Concern (ICC).

 
"We actually heard them [ISIS] crying takbir (God is greater)," Ahmed Siraj Aji Mohamed, a former resident of Hassakeh told IRIN News.

 
These are the first and second hand recollections of those who fled the northeastern Syrian city of Hassakeh on June 25. Islamic State militants entered the city by the southern neighborhoods reigniting familiar fears and terror for the largely Assyrian Christian population. Families, some seeking only temporary refuge in the city, faced the decision of chancing death and abduction or running north.

 
A Demand for Action told ICC that an estimated 60,000 people have been displaced within the city while another 10,000 people have fled to Qamishli and other areas. Assyrian International News Agency reported that approximately 2,000 Assyrian families were among those who fled north. This is the fourth attack of its kind in Hassakeh but it has been the strongest one as ISIS was able to gain control of multiple neighborhoods in the city.

 
Since the initial incursion on the 25th, Kurdish and Assyrian/Syriac militias have reclaimed much of the city and cleansed Hassakeh of terrorists; however land mines planted by the militants still litter the area. This is a single win in a string of losses for the people of northeastern Syria.

 
An Ancient Community Under Threat

Assyrians in the northern regions of modern day Iraq and Syria have roots dating back to the third millennium BCE. Christianity came to the area in the 3rd century, which is over 300 years before the birth of Islam and well over 1000 years before the discovery of the New World. Syria itself is named after these ancient people.

 
With the growing face of Islamic radicalism in the Middle East and the direct targeting of Christian demographics, Assyrians are now facing exile and execution for their belief and dedication to Jesus.

 
Entire Villages Drained of Christians, Again

 
This past February, ISIS invaded the northeastern Khabour area of Syria and ruthlessly drained around 30 villages of their Assyrian Christian populace. According to Unrepresented Nations and People's Organization (UNPO), over 200 of these captives are still being held by the jihadi militants who have demanded $100,000 ransom per prisoner, a price few in the region can ever expect to meet. There has been no real effort made to rescue these Christians, many of whom are women and children.

 
It's a dire state to live in, an atrocity that seems unthinkable.

 
Yet, we are reminded that the Assyrians of the Levant region are no strangers to atrocity, having suffered two genocides and a civil war in the past 100 years.
Assyrians, alongside of Armenians, were targeted by the Young Turk's genocide during and after WWI. In 1933, with the formation of the new Iraqi state, they were massacred yet again, causing many to flee to the Hassakeh region of Syria. And for decades they suffered under Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi Ba'ath party. The plight of these in Syria has been most serious with the outbreak and longevity of the Syrian Civil War.

 
Now as the country has been devastated by war for over four years with opposition groups, Islamic extremists, and the Syrian regime battling each other, Christians are not just collateral damage but prime targets in the conflict.

 
The Syrian Network for Human Rights (SN4HR) reports that, "Christians have become trapped and squeezed between the fire of the Assad Government and the hell of the extremist groups."

 
Despite Bashar Al-Assad's distinct claim to protect minorities, 63 percent of Christian worship places destroyed in the war have been targeted by government forces. Missiles unfortunately do not differentiate between Christian and non-Christian facilities. This is second tiered, but still an added burden to the suffering ISIS, Jabhat al-Nusra, and other extremists have inflicted on the Assyrian Christians.

 
"It Is Imperative We Find Another Solution"

With no protection from the outside world or even their own leaders, Assyrian Christians have been forced to take up arms of defense. The Patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox Church, Ignatius Aphrem II recently visited Qamishli and called on the youth to fight.

 
 "We are not the type of people who want to carry weapons," the Patriarch explained in hisaddress, "but because the army is not able to protect us, it is imperative that we find another solution."

 
There seems to be no rest or refuge for the Assyrian population. The world today continues to turn a blind eye to the suffering of this ancient and deeply rooted people group. Eshu Paul, an Assyrian Christian now living in Canada, expressed his concern to ICC in an interview, "If nothing is being done [for] Assyrians in the next decade, I don't think there will be any Christians left."

 
We must not allow these fears to manifest and be proven legitimate. The world, specifically the Christian world, has a responsibility to help these brothers and sisters in Christ.

 
Will it take another genocide for the church to wake up and see the needs of its own?

If so, we need only look to Hassakeh to realize it is already happening.
For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Police shut down church in Andhra Pradesh

India's Christians continue to face growing challenges to the free exercise of their faith. The challenges faced by Christ Calvary Konda Church are just a recent example of how Hindu radical groups are freely operating against India's Christian minority and infringing upon the Christians' religious freedom.  

A mob of radicals approaching the Christ Calvary Konda Church right before their attack
A mob of radicals approaching the Christ Calvary Konda Church right before their attack on the service
  
The members of Christ Calvary Konda Church, located in India's Andhra Pradesh state, have been meeting for worship in a makeshift shed every Sunday since 2004. According to Pastor Anand Raj, the head of Christ Calvary Konda Church, on June 28 while the service was taking place, a mob of radicals carrying saffron flags and large sticks advanced toward the church chanting anti-Christian slogans. As the radicals approached, they painted over the church's signboard located at the entrance of the church from the main road.

 According to local sources, the radicals then threw stones at the Christians fleeing the church when the mob broke into the church compound. Pastor Raj and his family members ran and hid themselves in the nearby bushes as the attackers threatened to kill the church's pastor.

Police arrived on the scene after the pastor made a phone call about the situation. The police took both Christians and radicals to the police station and released all with only a warning. The police then refused to file an FIR for the Christians against the radicals for the assault, despite the insistence of church members.

Following the assault, police have ordered the pastor not to hold any more church services until further notice and have posted a police constable at the church entrance to make sure the church remains closed.

Pastor Anand Raj, while speaking with ICC, said, "I am very fearful and scared of the entire situation, now that the Hindu radicals have seen us and our children, sending them to schools and colleges is real concern for us. We do know what will happen. What grieves us the most is that the authorities have asked us to close down the church. We have no other place for us to gather and have a worship service."

Pastor Raj went on to say that, "This is not the first time, the Hindu radicals attacked us. In April 2011, the radicals vandalized the church, destroyed the musical instruments, and burnt the Bibles." He continued, "Again in 2013, the electricity was disconnected to the church by the authorities through the sheer influence and involvement of radical Hindu organizations."

 
There have been four instances of religiously motivated violence in Adoni in the past year, all targeting Christians and churches. Reverend Prabhudas, secretary of Adoni Christians United Church Association (ACUCA), told ICC, "This is unacceptable to attack those who praying on their own and are not doing any harm to anybody. This is a secular country. We request both the authorities and the government to bring the perpetrators to books and protect Christians and churches."  

ACUCA released a memorandum on June 29 that "requested [authorities] to protect Christian minorities and churches and take an immediate action on the attackers who attempted to kill Pastor Anand Raju and his wife Mrs. Ratnamma." 

The activities of the Hindu radicals in Andhra Pradesh were illegal; however, it was the Christian victims of these radicals' actions who were punished by local authorities when their church was shut down. Will the authorities act on the injustices suffered by India's Christian minorities or will they continue to allow them to suffer unjustly at the hand of Hindu radicals?
For interviews, contact William Stark, Regional Manager for South Asia: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

One year since Malamade attack

Samuel Kang'ethe bears the scars of a gunshot wound to the abdomen that he sustained one year ago when Islamist al-Shabaab militants assaulted his home village of Malamande, Kenya, murdering all of the grown men present and torching the town. On the night of July 5, 2014, Kang'ethe dragged himself to the nearest bush to hide, fearing for his life, bleeding from his abdomen after being shot and witnessing his father's murder.

 
"The gang of about 15 men knocked at our door and my father opened. He was pushed back into his bed, tied up and shot 6 times at the head and 2 times at the back," he remembers.

"They ordered my mother to get out and sit down. They piled clothes on my father and set him on fire. I escaped through the window but unfortunately, the gunmen spotted me and I was shot on my stomach. I dragged myself in to the bushes and made a call for help to the nearest police post. We did not get immediate help until morning when I was taken to the hospital,"
he recounted. 

Remembering the Tragic Attack

Today, International Christian Concern (ICC) marks the tragic anniversary of al-Shabaab's attack on Malamade, a tiny village outside of Hindi town where militants murdered Christians who refused to convert to Islam.

 At around 11 p.m., 15 gunmen started shooting throughout the village and killed 15 people, leaving nine widows and several children fatherless.  Their main target was adult men whom al-Shabaab executed by either tying them up before shooting them or slashing their throats.
Those who managed to escape hid in the bush until morning, only to wake up homeless, their houses, church, and school burned while many of their friends and neighbors lay dead, murdered because of their faithfulness to Jesus.

 Altogether, 20 houses were razed during the attack. The scene told several stories of Christians murdered for Christ, like Kenya Kazungu, who was shot in the back four times and his Bible piled onto his corpse.

"They coerced me to convert to Islam or else they burn the house, school and the church," the town's pastor Elizabeth Odipo told ICC's Kenya representative. "When I declined, they ordered me to take my 2 granddaughters out of the house after which they set ablaze the house and left. They proceeded to the primary school and burnt all the stationary and desks. When they were done with the school they went to the village church, spent 1 hour playing the drums, and later burnt it to ashes," Odipo said.

Even a year later, the villagers still bear the burden of the attack. Life has proved especially difficult for mothers and children who lost their husbands and fathers.

 Salome's husband Stephen was brutally murdered that night. "Life has not been easy after the attack especially staying in a rented house, staying without food and staying away from our friends and neigbours," she said.

Rebuilding Hope

The townspeople have persevered through fear, hunger, sickness, and trauma, but their faith is left unshaken.

 ICC is working with local partners to rebuild hope through home reconstruction for 15 families whose houses were burned down. Brothers and sisters in Christ have discovered new joy looking forward to God's provision of shelter and are returning to their farming and business activities.

"Our hope to return to our homes has been rekindled and we thank God for using the ICC in such an incredible way," said Eunice Njeri whose house is being rebuilt. "This is a new day that the Lord has made and we are extremely happy about owning new houses."

Before the attack, Malamande was a vibrant village with bustling crop trade and several small businesses operating, but the assault on the town  changed that overnight. With Malamande rebuilt, the Christians there will be able to return to their farms and business and the local school will reopen.

 "I am a happy man once again. I had lost hope in life after my house and shop were burnt down by al-Shabaab. But now I have a house and soon I will resume my retail shop," said Joseph Muchemi.

As we remember the attack one year later, the victims commemorate their deceased family members and friends and thank God for the help from brothers and sisters in Christ.
For interviews, contact Troy Augustine, Regional Manager for Africa: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Empty promises of Modi

"That was only a promise," said Cardinal Toppo, commenting on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's lack of action in protecting Christians under the increasing threat of violence from Hindu extremists in India. After a turbulent first year in power, Modi's condemnations of religious intolerance and promises to protect religious minorities seem forced. Initially, it took over nine months for Modi to break his silence regarding the issue of religious violence and then, only at a time when circumstances compelled him.

Modi and his government have come under sharp criticism as religious intolerance has escalated. Right-wing Hindu nationalist groups, including the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), go unopposed when carrying out attacks on religious minorities, which has led to atrocious attacks on churches and Christians across India.

Modi's Silence Broken by the U.S.

Due to increasing fear among the religious minorities, leaders of the Christian community made multiple appeals to Prime Minister Modi shortly after his election to speak against the violence targeting the minorities of India. However, neither the government nor the Prime Minister condemned the vicious acts of RSS and other Sangh Parivar affiliates.

It was only after U.S. President Barack Obama made multiple remarks in early 2015 concerning the situation of religious freedom in India that Modi finally broke his silence. The U.S. President made a strong pitch for religious tolerance when he said "every person has the right to practice his faith without any persecution and that India will succeed so long it is not 'splintered' on religious lines" at an event in the Siri Fort auditorium on the final day of a visit to India. At the National Prayer Breakfast less than a week later, Obama remarked that in India there were "acts of [religious] intolerance that would have shocked Gandhi, the person who helped to liberate that nation."

Shortly after Obama's remarks, Modi broke his silence on the issues of religious intolerance, claiming his government "gives equal respect to all religions. My government will ensure that there is complete freedom of faith and that everyone has the undeniable right to retain or adopt the religion of his or her choice without coercion or undue influence."

Modi Claims Religious Freedom for India Abroad

Before traveling to Germany in April, Modi addressed representatives of 195 countries in a packed hall at the UNESCO (United Nations Educational Scientific Cultural Organization) in France and claimed that his government is committed to defending the rights and liberties of all Indians.

Observers have pointed out that Modi's claim at UNESCO, during his maiden trip to Europe, was motivated by foreign investment. Sanjay Kirloskar, an Indian industrialist, said, "Modi was compelled to speak on religious freedom in India," as many investors in foreign countries are from India's religious minority communities.

Cardinal Toppo has said, "Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, has failed to keep his promise [to take] action to protect Christians under increasing threat from extremist violence." Cardinal Toppo also observed that the government did "not come out to protect and defend. The Prime Minister has only once spoken in defense of the constitution and he promised to protect the Christians and other minorities. But that was only a promise."

Time Magazine Interview

Modi gave an interview to Time Magazine around the time when his government marked their first anniversary in office. The Time interview was also given around the time of the USCIRF (United States Commission on International Religious Freedom) report findings of 2014 religious freedom situation in India that placed India in the category of a Tier 2 Country of Particular Concern for its religious freedom violations.

Modi, while touching on several achievements of his first year in office, chose to speak on the government's sincerity towards the freedom of faith and tolerance. He said that, "All religions and all communities have the same rights and it is my responsibility to ensure their complete and total protection. My government will not tolerate or accept any discrimination based on caste, creed, and religion. So there is no place for imaginary apprehensions with regard to the rights of the minorities in India."

Whatever the promises one makes, it is the follow-up actions on those promises that matters the most. India's Christians hope to hold the government accountable to their promises and seek international solidarity. Will Modi's promises on the international stage help bring about change for India's religious minorities? Or will Modi's promises remain unfulfilled, leaving Christians and other religious minorities to suffer at the hands of extremists?
For interviews, contact William Stark, Regional Manager for South Asia: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.