Tag Archive | "afghanistan"

Christian leader calls for a separate Christian province in Pakistan

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A Christian leader in Pakistan called recently for the formation of a separate Christian province in the country, according to the Pakistan Christian Post.

Nazir S. Bhatti, head of the Pakistan Christian Congress  said recently that Pakistan has become a safe haven for Islamic extremist organizations.  As a result, they can wage Jihad against the Pakistan government at any time, the PCP reported.

Because of this, Bhatti recommended dividing the Punjab into four provinces, including a Christian province to preserve the country’s solidarity and integrity.  Christians are the second largest population in Punjab, according to the PCP.

As of now, some 20 million Pakistani Christians are victims of discrimination and denied equal democratic rights in Pakistan, the PCP said.  Nazir Bhatti noted:

  • Christians are treated like slaves and untouchables.
  • Christians may not dine in Muslim owned restaurants nor drink water in the same glass as Muslims in public places.
  • One elected Christian member of the National Assembly of Pakistan was forced to pay for cups, glasses and plates when his delegation ate food from a roadside Muslim vendor.
  • Muslim Imams call Christianity a religion of infidels.
  • Muslims may force Christian wives to convert, but they may not eat with them.
  • If a Christian is found to be eating a Muslim dinner, they will be beaten.
  • Christians may not enter the catering business in Pakistan.
  • Muslims must not eat food prepared by Christians.

According to Bhatti, the All India Christian Association favored the formation of Pakistan as a separate country upon the assurance that both faiths shall enjoy equal rights.  With this assurance, Christians in the Pakistan Movement played a large role in gaining the country’s independence in 1947.

However after the legislation of the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan in 1973 Christians became second class citizens in their own land, according to the PCP.

Bhatti noted that historically, Christians were sons of Pakistan soil, while Muslims were invaders who migrated from Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan and Central Asia.

Bhatti said the Muslims forcibly converted Sindhi, Balochi and indigent Punjabi to Islam, the PCP reported.

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President Obama falls short in protectionist actions for world religious freedom

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The U.S. Commision on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) noted in its recent 2010 annual report that President Obama has fallen short of doing what he can to lobby for the protection of religious freedom in the world.

The report noted that until now, President Obama has failed to appoint an Ambassador-At-Large for International Religious Freedom, a request that was made to him last month in a petition signed by lawmakers, scholars and human rights groups.

The same petition requested that the position be given equal level to other Ambassadors-At-Large who report directly to the Secretary of State, according to The Christian Post.

The USCIRF also noted that under Obama’s watch, no countries have been rated CPC, or “countries of particular concern” for having the worst religious violations.

Such a rating can prompt government action including trade restrictions, sanctions, embargoes, and withholding of military or financial aid, among others, The Christian Post said.

The same report said that the USCIRF, an independent US government commission, made these observations even as it said that with every year the issue becomes less and less important to the White House and the State Department.

The position of Ambassador-At-Large for International Religious Freedom, for example, was created in 1998, but it had only been filled in its initial year, and has remained vacant since 1999.

The commission warned Obama that failure to fill the position sent a message to the international community that religious freedom is not an important issue to the American government, the Christian Post said.

The same report noted that USCIRF took issue with the fact that Obama rarely mentioned religious freedom when he visited Ankara and Cairo last year.

Furthermore, Obama and Secretary of State Hilary Clinton replaced the words religious freedom with “freedom of worship.”

The commission said authoritarian governments could skirt the issue by noting that faiths that are okay with them can freely worship.

Credit:svilen001/sxc.hu

They could also permit only token houses of worship for minority faiths.

According to CNN, the USCIRF also reported that:

* Over 24 countries are religious freedom offenders and practice religious persecution.

* Forms of religious persecution may include imprisonment, murder, being fired from jobs, and being kicked out of universities; being forbidden to have bank accounts, driver’s licenses and even birth certificates, among others.

* 13 countries should be rated CPC or “countries of particular concern” because they have the worst religious violations. These countries include Myanmar (Burma), China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Suda, Uzbekistan, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Vietnam.

* 12 countries on the watch list are Afghanistan, Belarus, Cuba, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Laos, Russia, Somalia, Tajikistan, Turkey and Venezuela.

* The report has five more countries under CPC rating than does the State Department’s 2009 report, which did not include Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan, Turkmenistan or Vietnam.

* 3 countries, Bangladesh, Kazakhstan and Sri Lanka, should be closely monitored.

Specific Countries

* Egypt. Members of the Baha’I faith and minority Muslim sects are imprisoned, fired from jobs, kicked out of universities, and barred from having bank accounts, birth certificates and driver’s licenses.

* Nigeria. A decade of violence between Muslims and Christians in the Jos state recently culminated in 500 men, women and children hacked to death with machetes and dumped into wells.

* China. Cracked down on Uyghur Muslims in the west.

* Iran. Labeled domestic political opponents “enemies of God” which is a capital offense and can merit severing of the head.

* Eritrea. Harassment of Orthodox Church members and Jehovah’s Witnesses.

* Vietnam. Imprisonment of Buddhists and Protestants.

The USCIRF report urged the government to double its efforts to protect international religious freedom and to raise issues of abuse to the highest levels of the world community, the Christian Post said.

“Anything less betrays our history and values, and fails to leverage the extraordinary capacity we have as a nation to promote religious freedom and related human rights for all,” the report said.

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Uzbekistan: Two 15-day Jail sentences for prisoners of conscience

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Forum 18 News Service — Two members of the Full Gospel Church in Termez, in southern Uzbekistan

close to the border with Afghanistan, were each sentenced to 15 days in jail on 23 April, Protestant sources have told Forum 18 News Service. Azamat Rajapov and Abdusattor Kurbonov were found guilty of breaking Administrative Code Articles 240 (“violation of the law on religious organisations”) and 241 (“teaching religious beliefs without specialised religious education and without permission from the central organ of a [registered] religious organisation, as well as teaching religious beliefs privately”), for which 15 days’ imprisonment is the maximum penalty.

In 2009, 21 Protestants and Jehovah’s Witnesses are known to have been given jail sentences of between 5 and 15 days for their religious activity.

The short-term jailings appear to have abruptly stopped in late August 2009, but have now re-started. Much longer jail terms are given to Muslims the authorities prosecute for religious activity.

Where are the prisoners of conscience being held?

Local Protestants have also complained to Forum 18 that court verdicts have so far not been given in writing to the victims’ families.

A local Protestant, who did not want to be identified for fear of state reprisals, said that family members were not told either where their relatives were being detained or tried, despite asking two different courts and Termez Police. The two Protestants were – the families were finally told – tried by Judge Kurbon Tangirov of Uchkyzyl District Criminal Court in Termez City Court, the Protestant told Forum 18 on 28 April. It is notclear why the two church members were tried in Termez by a judge from a nearby district, and not by a Termez judge.

The court would not give any details except a telephone number for JudgeTangirov, and asked the family to call him, the Protestant said.

“However, no one has answered the telephone, which the family have tried to call for the last two days.”

Forum 18′s calls to the number also were not answered on 28 and 29 April.

Eventually, after repeated enquiries to Termez Police, the families were told that the police were holding the two prisoners. Khayrullo Sodikov, Termez Deputy Police Chief, confirmed to Forum 18 that Rajapov and Kurbonov were being imprisoned by the police in Termez. “We will be free them after one day,” he claimed to Forum 18 on 29 April.

Deputy Police Chief Sodikov refused to state why the Protestants were arrested, but said that they were not under 15-day arrest. He then refused to speak further to Forum 18.

Termez City Court officials initially refused to speak to Forum 18 on 28 April.

Eventually a court official referred Forum 18 to Judge Oktam Khalikov, the Court’s Chair. The official who answered that phone said that he was Judge Khalikov. But when Forum 18 asked about the case, the official then claimed: “I am actually Judge Khalikov’s assistant and I do not know about the case.” Asked what the families of the arrested Protestants should do, the official said, “I do not know what to say.” He then hung up the phone.

Rajapov was among local church members fined 50 times the minimum monthly wage, for exercising their freedom of religion or belief in October 2007.

No warning arrests and jailings

The arrest and jailing of the two Protestants came as a surprise for the members of the Full Gospel Church, and the prisoners of conscience’s families and friends.

A local Protestant told Forum 18 on 28 April that the arrest and imprisonment of Rajapov and Kurbonov was unexpected, as there was no prior warning or summons to a court. Both men left home by car on the morning of

23 April. The first news of their imprisonment was when one of the two men had a very short conversation with his wife, after 5 pm, saying they were both imprisoned for 15 days and asking for his car to be collected from Termez Police Station.

Pressure on other church members

Members of the Full Gospel Church in nearby Sherabad and Jarkurgan are known to have been put under strong police pressure to write statements against Rajapov, a local Protestant confirmed to Forum 18.

Media attack

On 24 March, one month prior to the imprisonments, the government-sponsored Press-uz.info news agency published an article entitled “Like pastor, like flock” attacking Rajapov and the Full Gospel Church. “Chori Eshmurodov”, the author of the article, claims that he is a former church member. Media articles have been used before by the authorities to attack people exercising their freedom of religion or belief (see F18News 16 February 2010.

Rajapov is said to have “enticed” the author by “promising him material help and happiness,” which he ultimately did not get. “They [Rajapov's family] have two cars, a house in Termez and are building a shop in Termez.

I also heard that they have bought two houses in a central area in Tashkent, in one of which his parents and brother Anvar are living. Anvar also has a car, and like his brother he is a leader in a large Pentecostal community. He receives large financial support for winning young students into the ranks of his church. I thought that I also would soon become rich like them, but it never happened.”

The author alleges that “Azamat [Rajapov] receives tens of thousands of US dollars for spreading his faith in the region and for helping out new Uzbek converts.

I talked to many new converts who denied to me that they, just like me, have ever received any money from Azamat. I understood that he is not only deceiving me and others, but also his sponsors by appropriating money given by foreigners,” the article claims. It then goes on to attack other named members of the Church for “unregistered activity” and claims that “I decided to publish my confession because I want people to read this and not believe crooks like Rajapov”.

Local Protestants strongly reject the article’s allegations. One Protestant

described the claim of Rajapov receiving huge funds from abroad as “a ridiculous lie.” Another Protestant denounced the article as “a lie against Azamat”.

Neither Protestant had ever heard of “Chori Eshmurodov”, the author named by Press-uz.info. “No-one in our Church knows any such person of this name or like the author of the article,” one told Forum 18.

Press-uz news agency would not speak to Forum 18 on 29 April, asking Forum 18 to ring back in one hour. When Forum 18 called again, nobody answered the telephone. The Uzbek mass media is often used by the authorities to encourage intolerance of minority religious communities and freedom of religion and belief (see F18News 22 February 2010

Torture threats against women

Women (and occasionally men) detained to punish them for their religious activity by the police or National Security Service (NSS) secret police can be targeted by male officials with overt or implied threats of sexual violence. Forum 18 notes that it is very unusual for male and female victims to want to document their experiences publicly, for fear of state reprisals, because of the traumatic nature of their experiences, and because of strong social pressures against women in particular speaking out about male violence.

In addition, cultural traditions of “honour” can destroy a woman’s good name if she is known to or thought to have been the victim of sexual violence or even if she has been alone – for example overnight – with male police officers who are unrelated to her.

In a not untypical incident in 2010 in a part of Uzbekistan not indicated in this or recent Forum 18 articles – the month, location, belief involved and details of which are confidential – female religious believers detained during a police raid were threatened with having their clothes forcibly removed, being tortured with electricity, and then pictures of them being raped by male criminals being made public.

The UN Committee Against Torture found in November 2007 that the use of torture by state officials is “routine” in Uzbekistan. Torture and threats of its use continues against people of all faiths.

Criminal charges threatened again

In yet another incident, Colonel A. Sirojiddinov, head of the police in Almalyk [Olmaliq] near the capital Tashkent, has continued to threaten religious believers by letter with criminal prosecution for their religious activity.

In a letter dated 16 March but received on 25 April, a letter Forum 18 has seen, Colonel Sirojiddinov threatened Sergei Zarubin, a member of an unregistered Protestant Church in Almalyk. “If you repeat the same violation [unregistered religious activity] in future, I warn you that you will be brought criminal charges against under Uzbekistan’s Criminal Code’s article 244 part 3,” the letter declares.

As in his earlier letter dated 13 March to a local Baptist, as Article 244 part 3 does not exist it appears that Police Colonel Sirojiddinov may mean Article 244-3 (“illegal production, storage, import or distribution of religious literature”). Zarubin, along with six others, was in September 2009 convicted for unregistered religious activity.

Attempts to reach Colonel Sirojiddinov and his Deputy Hikmatov on 29 April were not successful, as their telephones went unanswered.

Police Colonel Sirojiddinov’s letter is – like his earlier letter -”confusing”, a human rights defender, who for fear of state reprisals wished to remain unnamed, told Forum 18 on 29 April. “Article 244 has only one part and punishes mass riots,” he noted. However, the human rights defender stated, Article 244-3 – which the Colonel may mean – punishes “illegal production, storage, import or distribution of religious literature” with fines of between 100 and 250 times the monthly minimum salary, or correctional labour for up to three years.

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Christians Hope Kyrgyzstan Overthrow Will Not Affect Missions

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Amid fear and uncertainty, Christian leaders are asking for prayers for their missions in Kyrgyzstan.

Last Wednesday, President Kurmanbek Bakiyev was overthrown in a violent uprising that resulted in 81 dead and 1000 injured.

Last Wednesday, President Kurmanbek Bakiyev was overthrown in a violent uprising that resulted in 81 dead and 1000 injured.

In the immediate aftermath the nation was paralyzed with armed looting and rampant fear, but it has since calmed down, although the situation is far from steady, the Global Post reported.

An interim government has been established under former foreign minister Roza Otunbayeva, who is now trying to consolidate his power.  Christians hope the new government will permit a freer environment for evangelization.

The Slavic Gospel Association’s (SGA)  Joel Griffith said that while the situation seems to be more political than religious, “these things have ripple effects that are unforeseen.”

The new government expressed gratitude for the Kremlin’s generosity even as they accused the American military of enriching the Bakiyev family through jet fuel purchases from companies linked to Bakiyev’s son, Maxim.  There is no evidence to such claims.

However, the US Manas air base in Kyrgyzstan is a key transit point for troops and supplies to Afghanistan.

Appeals for Prayers, Resources

Sergey Rakhuva, vice president of Russian Ministries asked for prayers for wisdom and courage for believers in Kyrgyzstan so that they may continue to share their faith.  Rakhuva also requested for money and resources so that the church can grow, Mission Network News (MNN) reported.

Russian Ministries has several programs including School Without Walls.

Bob Provost, president of the Slavic Gospel Association (SGA) said “Please join us in praying for our brothers and sisters in Kyrgyzstan, asking the Lord to not only protect the churches, but also to open up many opportunities to proclaim the Gospel, as well as the peace and ultimate reconciliation that can only come through saving faith in Christ,” ASSIST News Service reported.

The SGA lends active support to evangelical ministries in many Central Asian republics, although they are not currently working in Kyrgyzstan.  Provost asked believers for prayers and guidance,  as they “prayerfully seek His will about any possible future assistance to churches in Kyrgyzstan.”

Bakiyev had been in power since 2005.  Immediately after the Soviet breakup churches enjoyed a significant degree of freedom to worship and minister.

However, since 2008, restrictions on evangelical churches increased in Kyrgyzstan and its neighboring countries namely Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.

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