KHARTOUM, Sudan, August 3 (Compass Direct News) – Hiba Abdelfadil Anglo, 16, has escaped from a gang of Muslims who kidnapped her last year, but it may be a long time before she recovers from the trauma.
KHARTOUM, Sudan, August 3 (Compass Direct News) – Hiba Abdelfadil Anglo, 16, has escaped from a gang of Muslims who kidnapped her last year, but it may be a long time before she recovers from the trauma.
Pastor Paulo Kamole Masegi of the Evangelistic Assemblies of God cannot live on the property he purchased, because neighbors were upset that he used the place to also hold worship services on the island of Zanzibar in east Africa.
Islamists also demolished the foundation of the church building that Masegi was constructing on his land, and a mosque is being erected in its place with the collusion of local officials, Compass Direct News said.
Masegi bought the land in April 2007 with plans to build a church in Mwanyanya-Mtoni. By November he built a house for himself which doubled temporarily as a place for worship, CDN said.
Masegi planned to build a church within the compound eventually, and the house would be his family home. When the worship services began on Nov. 11, 2007, Muslim residents objected, CDN said.
Local Muslims began construction of a mosque only three feet away from the church in August 2009. Then on November that year, Masegi began building his permanent church on his land. This led Muslims to storm into the compound and destroy the structure, CDN said.
When the incident was reported to the police no action was taken. Neither were church leaders given a copy of the crime report which they needed for court purposes. Inquiries by Christian leaders about the crime report were stonewalled, CDN said.
The absence of a court report further obstructed the construction of the permanent church building from proceeding. However the mosque was built with no trouble and was finished in December 2009.
Western District Commissioner Ali Mohammed Ali sent a letter to Masegi on Feb. 16, 2010 saying the Christians had no right to worship in a “residential home.” Neither could he convert his house to a worship center because the police refused to prosecute those who destroyed the church building foundation, CDN said.
Both police and Muslims in the area regularly monitor the home and all movements of Masegi. Zanzibar is predominantly Sunni Muslim. There are restrictions on purchasing land if it will be used for a church building. Neither do they allow open preaching. Christian programs are aired on television in limited time slots. All schools can only teach the Islam religion, and the cost of evangelizing is brutal, CDN said.
Two Christian evangelists were brutally attacked recently on a jungle road en route to an India village, and then were left in the dark because their six assailants thought they were already dead.
The victims, Mahindra Kharoley, 20, and Munshi Prasaad, 30, were attacked in Balaghat district, Madhya Pradesh. They were bicycling home to their village after a prayer meeting in Dunda Sivni 15 miles away. The attackers followed them on two motorbikes, then with their faces covered accosted the two, accused them of “forced conversion,” and beat them, Compass Direct News said.
The six men hit and kicked the two evangelists repeatedly. Bahey said, “They banged my head on the cement road and hit me hard with their boots on top of my head, splitting my forehead.” His clothes were soaked in blood and he had a deep gash above his eye on his forehead, and internal injuries, CDN said.
Kharoley said, “We lay motionless and pretended to be dead after they had beaten us about 20 minutes, to escape their fury.” He had internal body, chest and head injuries. His right thumb was nearly fractured, CDN said.
When the two played dead Bahey heard one attacker call another by the name “Mahesh,” saying, “They are already dead – let’s get out of here.” There was no moon and they were in pitch darkness 800 meters from their home village, CDN said.
The two managed to get back to their village where they were immediately rushed to a government health center, then a hospital. Although they had filed a complaint about the July 20 incident, the Kirnapur police have yet to investigate, CDN said.
Sub-Inspector Sandhir Chaudhary said he is busy with more important cases, and plans to look into the attack after Aug. 5.
Even the local police in this Pakistan town are afraid to report the murder of a Christian woman and her four children by an influential local Muslim leader, Compass Direct News said.
Muslim leader, Maulana Mahfooz Khan led a mob that entered the home of Razia Jamshed. The mob beat Razia and her four children to death.
Their justification for doing so was that Razia’s 11-year-old son, had committed blasphemy.
The slaughter took place in Jhelum, 53 miles south of Islamabad, capital city of Pakistan, CDN said.
The victims are the family of police officer Jamshed Masih, also a Christian. They had just moved to Jhelum from Gujrat.
Shortly after their arrival, Khan summoned Masih to the mosque to tell him that the community wanted the family to leave the town, CDN said.
Masih told his wife of the incident and together they told Saleem Mall, the pastor of the local Presbyterian church.
Mall advised them to leave the house saying, “It can be dangerous living there—these people can harm you family,” CDN said.
According to their neighbor, Ali Murtaza, on June 21 at 7 a.m. Masih went to work.
Murtaza said he heard the children singing hymns before breakfast.
Razia then sent their 11-year-old son to buy detergent, and he sang while going to the store. The shopkeeper asked the boy if he was a Christian, and the child said he was, CDN reported.
The shopkeeper then said, “I don’t sell to any non-Muslim, you are not welcome here, don’t you dare ever come to my shop again.”
When the boy went home and told his mother, Razia called her husband and asked him to come home immediately, CDN said.
Then some residents came to the house with Khan.
According to the neighbor Khan told Razia that the boy committed blasphemy and should be punished.
Razia said he was just a child, and then someone in the crowd banged something on her head. The children cried, and as the daughter tried to call the police the mob attacked the family shouting, “This family has committed blasphemy, they should be killed.” They were murdered before the police arrived, CDN said.
According to Pastor Mall, a complaint could not be filed because Station House Officer Ramzan Mumtaz refused to do so saying that he is a poor man with a family, and Khan is very influential.
Mall said, “We condemn this brutal murder of innocent children in the name of Islam. This has to stop now. We appeal to the government to let us live in peace,” CDN said.
The parents of a 17-year-old Somali girl severely beat her and then tied her to a tree for over a month when they found out she had converted to Christianity, Compass Direct News said.
Hassan Kafi Ilmi and his wife Hawo Godane Haf severely beat up their daughter, 17-year-old Nurta Mohamed Farah, and then promised her forgiveness if she renounced her faith, CDN said.
The family hails from the Gedo region of Southern Somalia. When the daughter refused to deny her faith, her parents brought her to a doctor for her “mental illness,” then forced her to take the medicine the doctor had prescribed, CDN said.
The Quran was also recited to her continually, as Somalis traditionally believe the Quran can heal the mentally ill. For more than a month, the girl has been bound to a tree all day, and then at night she is locked in a tiny, dark room, CDN said.
A source said the girl is very ill. The source asked for prayers and for advocacy for freedom of religion for the Somali people. Although the Transnational Federal Charter decrees religious freedom, Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government is not enforcing it, CDN said.
Non-Muslims are fearful about openly practicing their faith. Leaving Islam for another faith results in social harassment and sometimes, death, at the hands of either family members or the community, CDN said.