Anti-Christian violence in India continues

By Compass Direct News

NEW DELHI, September 30 (Compass Direct News) – A Christian couple was found murdered, a woman killed, numerous houses and churches burned and low-intensity bombs exploded at relief camps in the past week in Orissa state’s Kandhamal district, where Hindu extremist violence began more than a month ago.

 

On Sunday (Sept. 28), police found the body of Priyatamma Digal, an auxiliary nurse and midwife, in a river. On Monday, the body of her husband, Meghanath, was recovered. According to The Times of India newspaper, the Christian couple was killed last Thursday (Sept. 25).

 

Victim or Orissa anti-Christian violence. Photo courtesy of Compass Direct.

This morning attacks by unidentified armed groups in the villages of Rudangia, Telingia and Gadaguda in Kandhamal resulted in more than 100 houses burned and the death of Ramani Nayak of Rudangia village, reportedThe Hindu. Her religious affiliation was not known at press time.

 

Eight people were seriously injured in the attacks, according to reports, and about 20 people received minor injuries.

 

Bomb blasts yesterday rocked three Kandhamal relief camps in the Nuagaon area, Mahasinghi village and Baliguda town, reported the Press Trust of India (PTI).

 

No casualties were reported, but the explosions left residents of the relief camps fearing for their lives.

 

“Since they have been successful in exploding bombs near the heavily guarded relief camp, there is no guarantee that the explosions will not take place in other camps,” one refugee told PTI.

Axe Attack

The Times of India also reported that five houses were torched in Phirigia block in Kandhamal (Gochhapada police jurisdiction) on Sunday night.

 

Last Thursday (Sept. 25), some 700 people armed with axes, swords, and iron bars attacked a Missionaries of Charity house in Sukananda village in Kandhamal, reported Asia News agency.

http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=lead&lang=en&length=long&idelement=&backpage=&critere=&countryname=&rowcur=

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This post was written by mcarl on September 30, 2008

Who’s more unaware, Europeans or Americans?

By Bruce Bawer of Pajamas Media

In my 2006 book While Europe Slept, I expressed concern about the will of Europeans to defend their freedoms in the face of the continent’s Islamization. I contrasted them in this regard with Americans, for whom, I argued, freedom is a living reality for which they are willing to fight and to sacrifice.

My book came out in the midst of the Danish cartoon crisis. And during that crisis I saw things in Europe that — quite frankly — surprised and impressed me. I saw the editors of a Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, stand up for freedom of expression in the face of worldwide rioting, vandalism, and murder by Muslims and contempt on the part of foolish Westerners. I saw a Danish prime minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, in defiance of the UN, the EU, and most of the “international community,” stand by that newspaper and refuse to meet with Muslim ambassadors who were out to intimidate his country and to force Sharia-like restrictions on Western liberties. I saw the people of Denmark, in overwhelming numbers, stand behind their prime minister in his refusal to yield to jihad. And I saw major newspapers across Europe reprinting the Jyllands-Posten cartoons in acts of free-speech solidarity.

To see the whole article, click here…

http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/who’s-sleeping-more-deeply-—-europe-or-america/

For more analysis on the reach and expansion of Islam, click here…

http://jihadwatch.org/

To see the video, Islam:  What the West Needs to Know, click here…

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-871902797772997781

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This post was written by mcarl on September 30, 2008

Pakistan says Taliban war is spilling over from tribal areas

By AKI-ADN Kronos

Taliban leader in Pakistan. AKI Photo.

(AKI) – By Syed Saleem Shahzad – The Taliban rebellion which has gripped Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan is gaining strength and threatening to escalate in other parts of the country.

The tribal areas of the NWFP that border Afghanistan are steadily falling to a creeping Taliban-led militancy. Military operations have proved ineffective and the militants have rejected offers of any ceasefire while government offices, the Chief Minister’s house and military camps are now under attack in the area as well.

More than 100 Pakistani soldiers have been captured during operations to control militants in the Bajaur agency and the armed forces do not know about how to handle operations in the tribal areas. If security forces use jet fighters, militants slip into the thick forests of Kunar in Afghanistan through the maze of mountains on the border and if they advance overland, they immediately come under attack.

On Wednesday, all exit and entry routes leading to the Chief Minister’s House and the Governor’s House were closed, after the provincial capital of Peshawar came under intense attack this week,

Four rockets were fired on the airport on Monday and again Tuesday. The main oil depot of the city which provides the city’s fuel supplies and power generating stations, came under attack on Sunday but fortunately the target missed or the city would have been plunged into darkness for two weeks. 

The Kohot Tunnel, the main trade route of the province has been closed for the last sixteen days due to military operations in the Dara Adam Khail. 

On Tuesday, the impartial Taliban commander Abdul Wali declared war on the security forces in the adjacent Mohmand Agency, immediately to the south of Bajaur, and sent hundreds of new militants to attack security forces there. 

The region around Peshawar, capital of the North-West Frontier Province, including Shabqadar, Charsada, Matni has been a battle ground between the security forces and the Taliban. 

http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Security/?id=1.0.2509469117

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This post was written by mcarl on September 30, 2008

Somali house church attacked a second time

Edited from an ICC report  

Two people were seriously wounded by a Muslim mob that attacked a Tayeglow, Somalia house church for the second time in two years.

Dozens of Muslims wielding spears, machetes, sticks and other weapons destroyed the church and assaulted worshippers holding services in the town 198 miles from Somali capital Mogadishu.

Reasons for the assault have not been officially established, but sources say the attack could be in response to the conversion of the only son of a prominent Muslim cleric who lives in the area.

In the attack last year, gunmen opened fire on the congregation, seriously wounding the church’s pastor.  The pastor has not fully recovered from wounds suffered in that attack.

Sharia law in Somalia requires the death penalty for any Muslim who converts to Christianity.  Five people have been put to death in Somalia in the past year for publicly acknowledging their conversion.

http://www.persecution.org/suffering/index.php

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This post was written by mcarl on September 30, 2008

Pakistani refugees flee to (?) Afghanistan

By the BBC

Map

BBC map of the region.

The UN’s refugee agency says 20,000 people have fled Pakistan’s tribal area of Bajaur for Afghanistan amid fighting between troops and militants.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees says almost 4,000 families have crossed into Afghanistan’s Kunar province.

Some 300,000 others have been displaced by fighting, although Pakistan says many have found shelter in the region.

The country’s military has launched an offensive in Bajaur and says it has killed more than 2,000 militants.

However, the UN refugee agency, the UNHCR, believes that the majority of those who have left will return home after fighting stops in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata).

Cross border attacks

Announcing its estimates of the numbers of people who have crossed the border into Afghanistan, the UNHCR in Afghanistan said more than 600 families had left Pakistan for Kunar in recent weeks.

A spokesman said the organisation would look out for the welfare of the displaced if they were unable to return home before winter sets in.

“It’s very difficult to predict the security situation on the other side of the border but what we hope is that the security gets better and people will be able to go back,” Nadir Farhad told Reuters news agency.

Pakistani refugees from Bajaur in Peshawar camp

Refugees fleeing Bajaur. AFP Photo.

“But if it continues, we will definitely provide them with… assistance… so we can get them through the winter months.”

The UNHCR says most of the 20,000 who have fled over the border are Pakistanis, but a few thousand are Afghans who have been living in Pakistan.

Recently the UNHCR asked donors for more than $17m (39.4m) in aid to help about 250,000 people displaced by fighting and floods in north-western Pakistan.

They said money was needed to provide relief items like tents, blankets and plastic sheets.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7642015.stm

For more on this story, here’s a report by Reuters’ Jonathon Burch.

By Jonathon Burch,

KABUL (Reuters) – Some 20,000 people from Pakistan’s northwestern tribal region of Bajaur have fled to Afghanistan this summer due to intense fighting between government forces and militants, the United Nations said on Monday.

The Pakistani military launched an offensive in August for control over the strategically key region of Bajaur and have been involved in heavy fighting since then.

“More than 3,900 families, or around 20,000 individuals, have fled fighting in Bajaur … into Kunar province in eastern Afghanistan,” said the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in Afghanistan.

http://in.reuters.com/article/southAsiaNews/idINIndia-35713020080929

When do refugees return home?

This is the lead-in for the background story:

KHOST, 28 February 2008 (IRIN) – Most of the Pakistani families that had fled sectarian violence in Pakistan by seeking refuge across the border in southeastern Afghanistan earlier this year have returned to their homeland.

“When peace is restored, we too will return,” said Khan Malik, who along with 16 other family members arrived two months ago from the village of Bakzai across the border in Kurram Agency, in Pakistan’s increasingly volatile Federally Administered Tribal Areas. He is currently in Afghanistan’s Khost Province.

“There is a peace agreement, but it’s not clear whether it will hold,” the 30-year-old said, referring to ongoing clashes between Shia and Sunni extremists just weeks earlier.

Most of the nearly 5,000 Pakistanis that had initially sought refuge in Afghanistan in early January have since returned. “Of the old caseload of Pakistanis, the vast majority have since returned,” Nadir Farhad, information officer for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Kabul, told IRIN on 27 February.

http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/pakistan/2008/                                                     pakistan-080228-irin01.htm

For background on this issue, click to Global Security…

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This post was written by mcarl on September 29, 2008

Christian group reaches destroyed Indonesian village

By BosNews Life

JAKARTA, INDONESIA (BosNewsLife) — An international Christian aid group said Thursday, September 25, it has begun helping to rebuild a mainly Christian village in a remote area of Indonesia, which was destroyed by Muslim militants earlier this year.

The Britain-based Barnabas Fund said four Christians died, including an 84-year old man and a six-year-old girl, and dozens others were injured when a Muslim mob attacked Horale village in Maluku province in May. “On the night of May 2, a mob from a predominantly Muslim village nearby attacked Horale, wounding 56 Christians and brutally killing four,” the group told BosNewsLife. 

Three of the four victims had their throats slit, Barnabas Fund said. A woman, identified as Welhelmina Pattiasina, 47, was first tortured while her grand-daughter, Yola, 6, had her stomach cut open, said Barnabas Fund, which has investigated the situation. 

Edward Unwaru, 84, was reportedly burned to death after his throat had been cut, while a fourth victim, 39-year-old Josef Laumahina, was allegedly cut and then burned. A local school, three churches and 120 houses were reportedly burnt down and crops, fishing boats and motor-cycles destroyed.

http://www.christianpersecution.info/news/christian-aid-                                                                     reaches-destroyed-indonesian-village-16428/

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This post was written by mcarl on September 29, 2008

Saudi “religious cop” kills his daughter for converting to Christianity

By The Editor from a report by Voice of the Martyrs

A member of Saudi Arabia’s religious police is accused of cutting out his daughter’s and burning her to death for converting to Christianity.

The father works for the Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice and is accused of killing his daughter following a religious debate according to United Arab Emirates-based Gulf News.

Saudi media organisations report that the victim wrote a blog under the name “Rania” a few days before her murder. According to the Ukhdoud news website, the victim wrote that her life became difficult after her family began to suspect her beliefs following a family religious discussion.

She said her brother found some Christian articles written by her as well as a cross sign on her computer screen.  GulfNews.com reports that her brother began a series of angry insults against his sister following the discovery of the articles.

Saudi religious scholars frequently warn against the dangers of Christian Web sites and satellite television, which they say attract young Muslims to change their faith.  Muslim clerics warn have decreed that watching these channels or browsing these websites which call for conversion to Christianity is against Islamic teaching.

http://www.persecution.com/recent_saudiFatherKilling.html

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This post was written by mcarl on September 28, 2008

Millions in Zimbabwe face food shortages

By the CBC

A power-sharing government must be formed in Zimbabwe over the next few days to avoid a humanitarian crisis in the south African nation, its new prime minister designate said Saturday.

Morgan Tsvangirai

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai calls for unity government. BBC file photo.

Zimbabwe’s farming, mining and other industries have come to a near standstill as the country’s economy continues to crumble, Morgan Tsvangirai told reporters in Harare.

An estimated 5.5 million people will require food aid in the coming months as a result, said Tsvangirai, who is leader of the opposition party Movement for Democratic Change.

“I’ve had the opportunity to meet with food security experts, the food manufacturing companies and farmers to ascertain the qualities of food available,” he said.

“I’m sad to report that my preliminary findings in this exercise show a state of emergency, with disastrous consequences if we take too long to attend to this crisis.”

Tsvangirai said the only way to resolve the problem was for Zimbabwe’s leaders to form the new government. Uncertainty over when that will happen, he said, is causing unnecessary agony and anxiety.

“It is therefore imperative that a government be formed in the next few days and begins to implement plans to ensure that our people have food and do not die of starvation,” Tsvangirai said.

“The inclusive government will have to unequivocally make an urgent request for food assistance in order to see us through this period.”

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2008/09/27/zimbabwe-crisis.html

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This post was written by mcarl on September 28, 2008

Russian warship heads to horn of Africa after pirate attack, U. S. monitoring the situation

By the BBC and the Jerusalem Post

A Russian warship on Friday rushed to intercept a Ukrainian vessel carrying 33 battle tanks and a hoard of ammunition that was seized by pirates off the Horn of Africa – a bold hijacking that again heightened fears about surging piracy and high-seas terrorism.

File photo of assailants who attacked a cruise ship off the coast of Somalia in 2005

Piracy makes the waters off of Somalia the, most dangerous in the world. AP photo.

An earlier report said the 21 crew member ship was sailing to the Kenyan port of Mombasa under the Belize flag.

A US Defense Department official said Washington was concerned about the attack and U. S. ships are in the area, “Monitoring the situation.”

There is no decision on whether the U. S. navy will intercept the captured ship.

It was unclear whether the pirates who seized the 162-meter-long cargo ship Faina on Thursday knew that the ship carried 33 Ukrainian battle tanks.

Ukrainian officials and an anti-piracy watchdog said 21 crew members were aboard the seized ship, including three Russians.

The Russian foreign ministry now says it will carry out regular anti-piracy patrols in the Indian Ocean.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7637257.stm

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1222017404536&pagename=         JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

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This post was written by mcarl on September 26, 2008

American and Pakistani troops exchange shots across border

By the BBC

The United States military says US and Afghan forces have exchanged gunfire with Pakistani troops across the border with Afghanistan.

A senior US military official says a five-minute skirmish broke out after Pakistani soldiers fired warning shots near two US helicopters.

Pakistani soldier in Bajur

Pakistani soldier at border. AP Photo.

No one was hurt in the incidents and the US maintains its troops did not cross the border from Afghanistan.

Cross-border action by US-led forces has angered Pakistan in recent weeks.

The latest incident took place along the Pakistani border with the eastern Afghan region of Khost, an area which is a hotbed of militant groups.

Forces from the US-led coalition and the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) patrol the frontier, but Pakistan has been angered by reported US operations across the border in pursuit of insurgents.

A BBC correspondent says the border between the two countries is very unclear and in effect is marked by a 3km-4km (one to two mile) stretch of no-man’s land.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7636845.stm

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This post was written by mcarl on September 25, 2008