Tang lain mega di menua bukai, sida endang begedi ka agama sama diri lalu bemunsuh sampai bebunuh. Ba TV berita ke mayuh agi dikeluar ke ba TV kitai Malaysia nya tentang urang agama Kristin ke enggai meda agama Islam, taja pan menua nya ukai urang ke bepengarap Kristin tang Kristin ke lebih nampak disebut. Enda jauh nyema Israel nya bansa Judah tang pengarap bansa Judah ukai Kristin taja pan Tuhan Jesus di-ada ka ari bansa Judah. Tang ke bendar sida urang di menua Arap ke benci ke urang pengarap Kristin.
Peda berita dibaruh tu:
09/08/2008
Eleven year old Pakistan Christian girl allegedly raped
Incident ‘took place’ a day ahead of Ramadan
SARGODHA, PAKISTAN (ANS) -- A Muslim master allegedly raped his eleven year old Christian domestic servant on September 1, 2008, a day ahead of the advent of Ramadan.
Sana, the alleged rape victim, told ANS that the man she was working for had been making attempts to sexually abuse her since she started working at his house.
A resident of Gunnianwala, Sana said she had confided to her mother, Mumtaz, about the unease she was experiencing while working at this house.
Economic worries, however, forced the impoverished girl to continue working for her master amid fears of being sexually assaulted.
“He continued to harass me even though I told him that I would tell his wife if he did not stop harassing me,” said the alleged rape victim.
Sana said the accused allegedly raped her in the afternoon on September 1. She claimed that the man and his wife threatened her with dire consequences if she ever revealed the truth.
The All Pakistan Minorities Alliance (APMA) Zonal Youth Coordinator, Furrukh Tanvir Chaudhry, told ANS that the wronged family approached him when the girl did not reach home.
Sana and her family members |
“[The man] kicked Sana out of his house when he learnt that an application had been lodged against him at the police station,” he alleged. “It merits mentioning here that the Police have arrested [the man] and are investigating.”
Chaudhry said they rushed the girl to the district headquarter Sargodha hospital on September 2 where he claimed that the attitude of the medics was “callous” and “indifferent.”
“They would have never agreed to do medical examination of the girl if Tahir Naveed Chaudhry, a Member of the Punjab Provincial Assembly, had not intervened,” he claimed.
“You are simply not doing the examination of the girl since she happens to be a Christian,” Furrukh quoted Tahir as saying to a doctor at the hospital.
Chaudhry added, “We are optimistic that Sana's medical examination would be done tomorrow.”
POSTED BY / http://www.assistnews.ne09/08/2008
PAKISTAN: ELDERLY CHRISTIAN KILLED IN AXE MURDER
Suspects haven’t been charged; politicians shielding them from prosecution.
ISTANBUL, September 4 (Compass Direct News) – Four Pakistani Muslims killed an elderly woman with an axe over a dispute with her husband, who has been unable to prosecute them due to his low social status as a Christian.
Case workers said the alleged culprits targeted the couple for theft and later murder because they believed Pakistan’s legal system would not prosecute them for murdering Christians. The suspects’ connections to mafia and national politicians further emboldened them, they said.
“The Muslims assume the Christians are sheep and don’t have any weight,” said Sohail Johnson, case worker and chief coordinator of Sharing Life Ministry Pakistan (SLMP), a Non-Governmental Organization that supports Christian prisoners throughout the Punjab province. “The culprits thought, ‘[The Christians] have no voice. Nothing will happen if we do something,’” he said.
Noban Bibi, 65, was killed on July 2 in Pakistan’s eastern Kasur province in the village of Khraper.
The dispute that led to her murder started in January, when two men stole money and gold items from the couple.
According to a First Instance Report, Yaqoob Shareef and Hadayat Ali broke into the house of Dara Masih, 85, while his wife was away in Lahore. They stole gold ornaments and 15,000 Pakistan rupees (US$200).
Masih demanded they return the stolen goods or he would prosecute them. The alleged culprits then began threatening to kill him.
On July 2 at 2:30 a.m. Shareef, Ali, and two unknown persons entered their house and killed Bibi with a pickaxe.
An autopsy obtained by Compass said Bibi had multiple lacerations on her head, some nearly four inches long.
Johnson of SLMP said the alleged culprits believed they wouldn’t be prosecuted due to their connections to politicians and mafia.
Shareef, 36, and Ali, in his late 20s, are members of a criminal organization and have connections with local and national politicians that they are using to leverage the criminal justice system, said Shazhad Kamran, an SLMP case worker.
“In Pakistan, politicians always need criminals to assert their power in an area,” Kamran said. “They always depend on criminals, and criminals depend on politicians to save them.”
Bribery and ‘Dissimulation’
Masih nevertheless registered the murder with the local police. He could not convince local police officer Muhammad Akram to arrest Shareef and Ali, according to an SLMP report, because Akram received a bribe requiring him to threaten Masih to drop charges against them.
Masih then took the case to a district police officer in Kasur, who arrested Ali and Sharif. The two suspects, however, have not been formally prosecuted.
When the SLMP’s Johnson and Kamran approached Sub-Inspector Aslam Pistooly and Investigation Officer Malik Mansab Ali on Aug. 2, Pistooly claimed the two suspects were not guilty. To prove this, he said the accused would swear an oath of innocence in front of prominent Muslims at a mosque, the report said.
Johnson and Kamran refused the offer for the suspects to do so, stating that swearing an oath at a mosque is not a part of Pakistani criminal investigation proceedings.
Pistooly then became angry and told Johnson and Kamran, “If you are not satisfied that Muslims will go into the mosque and swear they are innocent, then if you can go into the church, put your hand on the Bible, and swear they are guilty, then I will make legal action against him,” according to Johnson.
Speaking by telephone from Kasum, Investigation Officer Ali, who was at the Aug. 2 meeting, said swearing an oath in a mosque as proof of innocence is illegal under Pakistani criminal law. Asked if Pistooly had asked the culprits to testify in a mosque, he told Compass he could not confirm it.
“I have not compelled any person to swear an oath in a mosque, and Pakistani law does not permit it,” he said through a translator.
The SLMP case workers said the Muslim suspects wanted to swear an oath at the mosque to take advantage of an Islamic tradition that allows accused men to give false testimony when under threat.
Known as Al Taqiyya (dissimulation), this concept allows Muslims to conceal the truth at a time of danger to save themselves from physical or mental injury. In some traditions, Al Taqiyya can only be used when one is wrongfully accused.
On Aug. 4 Punjab Minister for Human Rights and Minority Affairs Kamran Michael transferred the case from the district police office to the Karsur superintendent of police.
The SLMP case workers met with Kasur Superintendent of Police Rana Shahid Ahmed on Aug. 18. In their first meeting he was uncooperative and pressured Masih to drop all charges against the two suspects, the report said.
Johnson said he believes justice will not come easily for Masih because the case has become an issue of pride for local Muslims. Members of Parliament are supporting the alleged criminals and putting pressure on police to find them innocent, he said, “just to save the skin of Muslims.”
The SLMP is now trying to move the investigation to the Criminal Investigation Agency. It will first file a complaint in a lower criminal court against the alleged culprits and police for not registering the case.
Kasur is an agricultural city located in the Punjab province with a long Islamic history. The area contains radical conservative Muslim elements, such as members of Jamaat-Ud-Dawa, a Pakistani charity that the U.S. State Department designated a terrorist organization in 2006.
In recent years Christians in Kasur have faced charges of blasphemy against Islam, torture and forced conversion.
In July 2007 Catholic prisoner Dil Awaiz was tortured, barred from teaching Bible classes to fellow Christian prisoners and placed in solitary confinement. He was released in April this year.
Human Rights and Minority Affairs Minister Michael spoke to Christians in Kanganpur, 50 kilometers (31 miles) southeast of Kasur, on Friday (Aug. 29). He said the government was taking every step to protect minority rights, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan.
END
POSTED BY / http://www.compassdirect.org
+ Wife of Martyr Fouad Fawzy
The wife of fallen Copt Fouad Fawzy, as interviewed at the funeral of her husband, who was murdered after answering "Are you a Christian?" in the affirmative. For more information, read:
http://mychristianblood.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/07/04/mental-illness-or-motivated-murder.html#more
PESAN NGAGAI SEMUA KITAI ANANG SEKALI MEGA NGENYAIKA PENGARAP ISLAM DI MENUA MALAYSIA, TAUKA ANANG SEKALI MEGA KITAI NGEMAI SIDA KE UDAH MASUK AGAMA ISLAM MASUK AGAMA KITAI SECARA TERANG-TERANG LABAN ENGGAI KA KITAI TULIHKA PENUSAH UKUM KE BERAT ENTI DI TEMU PERINTAH MENUA MALAYSIA.
TANG LABAN KITAI IBAN ENDANG SIGI URANG BANSA KE BERANI KITAI ENDA TAKUTKA ENTI DIBAI URANG BEBUNUH. KAYAU AJA!!!
Di Kelantan nuan ulih kena BUNUH enti nuan ditemu ngereja pengawa tu!
Whipping, prison and fines for anyone who tries to convert Muslims
In Kelantan, the only Malaysian state run by an Islamic party, penalties for anyone who proselytises among Muslims have been increased. The new law is the strictest in the entire federation. After the Lina Joy affair, the more radical circles fear “mass conversions.”
Kuala Lumpur (AsiaNews/Agencies) – The only state in Malaysia run by an Islamist party, the opposition Pan-Malaysia Islamic Party (PAS), has approved stiffer penalties to deter people from trying to convert Muslims to other faiths. Under the revised law passed by the northern Malaysian state of Kelantan, anyone found guilty faces a maximum penalty of six lashes with a rattan cane, five years in prison and a fine of almost us$ 3,000. The previous maximum penalty was two years in prison and a fine of RM 5,000 (US$ 1,400).
Hassan Mohamood, who heads Kelantan's Islamic affairs committee, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the stiffer laws are useful "as a form of deterrence".
Proselytising of Muslims is forbidden under federal laws, but the recent case of Line Joy, a Malay-Muslim woman who sought legal recognition of her right to pick her religion of choice, raised fears among some in Malaysia over mass conversion.
Kelantan authorities are not new to taking extremist steps. Last year the PAS government passed a law giving Muslims a cash bonus worth US$ 2,700, plus a US$ 270 monthly subsidy, free housing and a car if they married and converted indigenous animist people.
BUKA MEH MATA KITAI, SAPA KE MUNUH SAPA? SAPA KE KEBENDAR IA NYA PENGGANAS NITIH KA BERITA DI MENUA MALAYSIA.
Christian prosecution prayer in Jordan
Suha Philip Ma’ayeh, Foreign Correspondent
Iraqi Christians attend a mass prayer at the Assyrian church in Amman, Jordan, on Oct 19 2008. Salah Malkawi / The National
AMMAN // Iraqi Christians in Jordan have reacted with outrage and sadness over recent attacks on their community in the north of Iraq that killed at least 12 and forced nearly 10,000 to flee their homes this month.
“We pray for those who were killed mercilessly. We pray for Iraq and for Mosul in particular,” Remon Moussalli, a Chaldean priest, told a congregation that had gathered at a small church in Amman for an evening mass.
On Friday in Geneva, the UN refugee agency said about half of the Christians in Iraq’s northern town of Mosul, nearly 10,000 people, had fled after attacks and threats.
“This is an orchestrated and ugly campaign against Christians,” Fr Moussalli said. “We hear that the families are having tough times; they do not have enough protection. Many were threatened and killed.”
The spate of attacks, the worst since 2003, underscored the plight of Iraqi Christians, who have become a dwindling minority in their country. Some estimates placed the number of Iraqi Christians at 800,000 at the time of the US-led invasion. But that number has now fallen to about 500,000 because many have left to join families abroad.
Most Iraqi Christians are Chaldeans – followers of the eastern Catholic churches that are independent from Rome but recognise the pope. Fr Moussalli estimates that there are 10,000 to 15,000 Iraqi Christians in Jordan.
Archbishops are worried that the Christians who have lived in Iraq for the past 2,000 years will soon become extinct.
“We felt we were vulnerable. I even stopped going to church two years ago. Our priest was threatened,” said Dina Rafael, 37, who came to Jordan from Iraq with her family eight months ago.
Ms Rafael is preparing her documents to apply for refugee status with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, hoping to be resettled in the United States where she will join the rest of her family.
Ms Rafael believes there is no place for Christians in Iraq anymore. “In the Zayounah neighbourhood in Baghdad where I used to live, there are no more Christians. They have left the country, it has become difficult for us to live [there]. There is no place for us in Iraq anymore. We cannot defend ourselves.
“In the lab where I used to work, we were mostly Christians. This past Christmas, I narrowly escaped an explosion when a bomb blew up at the main gate.”
Despite news that Iraqi security forces have arrested four men in connection with the Mosul attacks, Fr Moussalli said Christians feel they do not have the support of the government in Baghdad.
What has made matters worse is the recent scrapping of Article 50 from Iraqi Electoral Law that once guaranteed minorities electoral rights.
The quota system provided minorities with a vote; without that right, they now feel discriminated against.
“The events in Mosul were unexpected as we thought that things had started to settle down in Iraq. But it seems the violence erupted once the minorities were deprived from their rights in the recent amendment,” said Rafat Rafael, Dina’s older brother.
Jordanian analysts warned that the attacks could spiral and further rent the national fabric of the country, and blamed the continued occupation of Iraq for fomenting sectarian tensions. “This segment of Iraqi people is part of its national Arab and political identity. So those who are targeting them are not murder gangs or explosive experts, but they are part of a project that has been ongoing since the occupation that sought to upset the identity of Iraq,” said Samih Maaytah, a columnist with the Alghad daily.
The Jordan Bar Association described the attacks as a conspiracy that targeted the unity of the Iraqi people.
“The events in Mosul seek to ignite sectarian and ethnic discord in Iraq… the association holds the Zionist-American occupation accountable.”
As the Chaldeans were singing hymns at the church, Samia, a 39-year-old Iraqi, said she was worried about her sister’s brother-in-law in Mosul.
“I am worried,” she said. “My sister’s husband was killed in Baghdad last year and now I am worried that his brother has been killed too. They are killing the Christians. What is our fault? How are we ever supposed to return to our country? If I ever return, I will come back [to Jordan] in a coffin.”
Islam has no tolerance to Christianity, because one believes in "Love" other believes on oppresion and slitting throats. Jesus says "Turn the other chick", Muhammed says "convert them or kill them". That's the whole difference.
Halki’s Chapel of the Transfiguration left in ruins
Forest guards began demolition work on the chapel without warning, Only the immediate protest of the prior of Haliki and Metropolitan Meliton avoided its total destruction. A Church in Kadikoy, ancient Calcedonia is also targeted by vandals.
Istanbul (AsiaNews) –A XVII century chapel dedicated to Our Lord’s Transfiguration, which lies in front of the Haliki School of Theology, was almost completely destroyed yesterday by Forest Guards. The Church had been recently restored with the permission of local authorities. Demolishers had begun tearing down the building without any prior warning, which is called for in such cases.
Only at the last minute was the total destruction of the chapel avoided: following protests by the prior of Haliki School and Metropolitan Meliton, director of the Ecumenical Patriarchates office for legal affairs, the prefect of the Prince Islands stopped the Forest Guards. The building however was seriously damaged.
The Prior of Halki immediately brought to the attention of the Turkish authorities that these kinds of episodes will provoke international disapproval, including that of the European Union. The Authorities response was stark: “Don’t dare to threaten us!”.
Shortly afterwards an “unknown” group smashed the windows of Holy Trinity Church in Kadikoy, ancient Calcedonia.
Diplomatic and journalistic circles mummer that cases such as these are on the increase and are not casual either: they are part of a strategy adopted by powers in Turkey who are against the nations process of integration in the European Union and are testing the Governments will to protect religious minorities.(NT)
posted by /http://www.asianews