Monday, March 16, 2009

Franklin Graham Responds to Ill. Church Shooting

The son of evangelist Billy Graham responded to the death of a pastor of an Illinois church, who was shot at church Sunday while preaching from the pulpit.Franklin Graham, president and CEO of Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, said he knew Pastor Fred Winters because the organization was collaborating with pastors around the St. Louis area on a youth evangelistic concert that was scheduled to be held in the area in August."I am deeply saddened at this tragic loss," Graham, who was in London when he received the news, said in a statement. "Our prayers go out to Pastor Winters' wife, Cyndie Lee, and their two children, Alysia Grace and Cassidy Hope, as well as the others wounded and all of those affected by this senseless act of violence today.""It was my joy to meet Pastor Winters recently while I was in St. Louis," added Graham. "I was looking forward to working with him this summer. His presence will be sorely missed."Graham, who also heads evangelistic relief organization Samaritan's Purse, was on his way home to the United States after meeting last week with the Sudanese on issues including religious freedom, human rights, extended focus on the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, and the complexities of Darfur."At a time when the world is experiencing so much suffering, an event like this underscores our need to place our trust and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ," said the evangelist....
By Katherine T. Phan
Christian Post Reporter
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As in the days of Noah...

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Experts: Churches Big and Small Need Security Plan

ST. LOUIS-Megachurches with large audiences have long planned for emergencies, but smaller churches often aren't ready for a crisis, experts say.First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill., where the Rev. Fred Winters was shot and killed during a sermon Sunday was an exception. It initiated a security and emergency plan six months ago, but church officials would not say what it entailed. The plan did not prevent an attack. Terry J. Sedlacek, 27, was charged Monday with first-degree murder and aggravated battery in the assault that killed Winters and left Sedlacek and two congregants who tackled him with stab wounds.Still, emergency plans are important, said First Baptist associate pastor Mark Jones."I hate to say this, but unfortunately I believe other churches need to follow that example," he said. "We need to be ready, we need to be prepared, but at the same time, we're not going to live in a state of fear."Televangelist churches and most megachurches with up to 5,000 congregants have coordinated security plans and undercover guards for high-profile ministers and assistants, said Dave Travis, managing director with the Leadership Network, a nonprofit that fosters church innovation nationwide.First Baptist, with 1,200 congregants, and even smaller churches are among the most vulnerable, he said."They tend to be fairly well known in the community, but not quite large enough to have thought through security issues," he said.His firm advises clients that every church needs a written security plan and an open discussion of the church's vulnerabilities.Churches are "soft targets"-easily accessible places with little or no security, said Jeffrey Hawkins, executive director of the Christian Security Network.After a church shooting last year in Knoxville, Tenn., a survey of Christian churches found 75 percent had no security or emergency plans, Hawkins said. The network's own poll of 250 U.S. churches showed a third had a security incident of some kind in the past year.The Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist in Knoxville did not have a security plan in place last July when an out-of-work truck driver went on a shooting spree, killing two people and wounding six. After consulting with police and crime experts, the church developed a plan that includes hiring sextons, not armed security guards, to watch for suspicious behavior."We want to be welcoming, we responded with love," said church board member Jayne Raparelli. "We kept our doors open. We don't make people go through metal detectors."
Raparelli could not say whether having a security plan would have stopped the shooter from executing killings he "had planned" and "wanted to do."For decades, security has been a major focus for Jewish organizations because of terror attacks in Israel and on Jews elsewhere.The Anti-Defamation League distributes a security manual that covers topics from armed intruders to bomb threats. National Jewish groups recently formed the Secure Community Network to oversee safety for Jewish groups nationwide.Boosting security can be contrary to the mission of houses of worship, said the Network's national director, Paul Goldenberg."On the one hand, you want to be accommodating," he said. "On the other hand, the world has changed."You don't want iron gates and armed guards, but houses of worship do need to train staff, congregants and ushers to identify and respond to such threats as an emotionally disturbed person," Goldenberg said.After a man in Colorado went on a shooting spree at two religious facilities in 2007, the Mosaic Church in Little Rock, Ark., established a group of ushers trained in security measures but designed to uphold the church's image as a sacred place-not an armed church.The Council on American-Islamic Relations, a civil rights group based in Washington, has published security guidelines and safety tips for mosques in response to assaults on mosques and American Muslims after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.The Christian Security Network recommends churches assess their risk for everything from fire and tornadoes to vandalism, burglary, sexual molestation and shootings, then build a plan.So far this year, churches in 39 states have reported 141 incidents, including burglaries and bomb threats.The biggest hurdle is overcoming the mentality that such incidents "can't happen here," Hawkins said."If you don't think it could happen to you, you won't be mentally prepared," he said. "You won't take it to heart."
Associated Press Religion Writer Rachel Zoll and writer Jim Suhr in Maryville, Ill., contributed to this report.
As in the days of Noah....

Remembering Pastor Fred Winters....

This 2001 photo shows Rev. Fred Winters in front of the First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill. A gunman walked down the aisle of the church on Sunday, March 8, 2009 during a Sunday service and killed pastor Winters, then stabbed himself and slashed two other people as congregants wrestled him to the ground, authorities said.
(Photo: AP Images /The News-Democrat, Steve Nagy)
PS:Please remember Pastor Winters family,friends and congregation in your prayers.Also remember to pray for the killer...he needs Jesus today...
As in the days of Noah....

Church Shooting Suspect Had Arsenal in Bedroom

ST. LOUIS-A man accused of running down and shooting an Illinois pastor to death mid-sermon left an arsenal of guns in his bedroom as well as an index card marked "Last Day Will."The arsenal in accused gunman Terry Sedlacek's room included two 12-gauge shotguns, a rifle and a box of 550 .22-caliber bullets, according to court documents filed Tuesday.The inventory of items seized from Sedlacek's Troy, Ill., home also lists the "Last Day Will" index card but does not detail what else was written on it. Sedlacek's day planner also singled out Sunday as "death day," prosecutor William Mudge has said.Authorities have said Sedlacek, 27, fired four times from a .45-caliber Glock handgun, hitting the Rev. Fred Winters once with a bullet that ripped through the preacher's heart before he collapsed and bled to death Sunday at First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill.Authorities said Sedlacek also brought to the church enough ammunition to perhaps kill 30 people.Sedlacek is charged with first-degree murder and aggravated battery, the latter charges related to his alleged wounding with a knife of two congregants who wrestled him to the ground and subdued him after the shooting...
By AP
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PS:This tragedy could have been a whole lot worse...Please remember to pray for this congregation....
As in the days of Noah...

Church resumes services week after pastor slain

MARYVILLE, Ill. (AP)-The church whose senior pastor was gunned down during his sermon resumed services Sunday with support from a guest preacher whose church in Texas also was bloodied by a gunman's rampage.The Rev. Al Meredith of Wedgwood Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas, opened his sermon to roughly 200 people at First Baptist Church's early service by apologizing that he wasn't "Pastor Fred.""I'm so sorry it's just me," Meredith said as he choked back tears. "I am so sorry this happened to you. We're praying for you."Police said the Rev. Fred Winters was shot through the heart during last weekend's early service at First Baptist by Terry Sedlacek. Police said he later tried to injure himself with a knife, wounding two men who subdued him.On Sunday, two dozen police officers stood outside the main doors, partly because some congregants had voiced fear about whether it was safe returning to the church.During his sermon, Meredith told the Maryville congregation that he came to "be with you to let you know there is hope" and that "you're never gonna get over this, but with God's grace you're gonna get through it."Meredith, 62, spoke about his own experience at Wedgwood Baptist, where a man opened fire on Sept. 15, 1999, killing seven people and wounding seven others.The Wedgwood attacker, Larry Gene Ashbrook, 47, had two guns, 200 rounds of ammunition and a pipe bomb in his pockets. He rolled one bomb down the aisle before killing himself. Investigators didn't have a motive but suggested that he was mentally ill.Investigators in Maryville said they found in Sedlacek's bedroom an index card marked "Last Day Will" and a planner that singled out that Sunday as "death day." Police have yet to find a motive. Sedlacek, who was charged with first-degree murder and aggravated battery, was being held without bail.Rosanna Kosek, 60, attended the early service Sunday and said Meredith's words of comfort resonated."It reaffirmed my thoughts that I'm on the right track," said Kosek, who wasn't at the service in which Winters was killed. "I wanted to come to the early one because I wanted to say I am not afraid. Evil is not going to keep me away from church."
As in the days of Noah....

Widow of Slain Illinois Pastor Says She Prays for Shooting Suspect

MARYVILLE, Ill.-The widow of a slain southwestern Illinois pastor said Saturday she and her daughters are praying for the man accused of gunning down her husband during a sermon last weekend.During a news conference outside First Baptist Church in this St. Louis suburb, Cindy Winters said she and her two daughters are also praying for Terry Sedlacek's family, according to a report in the Belleville News-Democrat."Terry, Jesus died on the cross for all of our sins, including the ones that you committed last Sunday," Winters read from a prepared statement.Sedlacek of Troy is charged with first-degree murder in the death of the Rev. Fred Winters. He's also charged with two counts of aggravated battery that accuse him of injuring two churchgoers. He's pleaded not guilty.It remains unclear whether Sedlacek even knew Fred Winters. He's accused of striding into the church on March 8 and firing four shots at the pastor, hitting him once in the heart.After his gun jammed, police say he pulled out the knife and wrestled with two congregants who subdued him. All three suffered knife wounds.Cindy Winters thanked people for their prayers, e-mails and cards."People we don't even know have taken the time to express in such beautiful, meaningful ways their concern and compassion," she said."I have been so touched and have had a hard time finding words to express the depth of my gratitude."She also thanked the media for "capturing the heart and passion of my husband and this congregation of believers."Earlier Saturday, the 27-year-old Sedlacek appeared in court via video hookup. He was barefoot and wore a blue robe as Madison County Associate Judge James Hackett read the charges against him.Attorney Ron Slemer, a part-time public defender, withdrew from the case Friday.Madison County Public Defender John Rekowski was appointed after Sedlacek's parents submitted affidavits saying he can't afford to hire his own lawyer.Sedlacek is being held apart from the general population at the Madison County Jail, Hackett said.A preliminary hearing is set for March 27.


As in the days of Noah...

Slain Pastor's Wife:"I Refuse to Let Satan Win"

Rev. Tom Cowin, pastor at The Rock Church of St. Louis, kneels during the memorial service for Rev. Fred Winters, the slain pastor of First Baptist Church of Maryville on Friday, March 13, 2009, in Maryville, Ill.(Photo: AP Images / Robert Cohen, Pool)
A casket is wheeled out of the sanctuary at the end of a memorial service for slain Pastor Fred Winters at First Baptist Church, Friday, March 13, 2009, in Maryville, Ill.(Photo: AP Images / Robert Cohen, Pool)

Cindy Winters eulogizes her husband, Rev. Fred Winters, who was shot dead in his church while delivering his Sunday sermon, at his funeral, at First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill., Friday March 13, 2009. 'On Sunday, my husband did not die...He just simply got a promotion,' Cindy Winters said in her eulogy.(Photo: AP Images / Robert Cohen, Pool)
MARYVILLE, Ill.-The widow of a pastor killed in mid-sermon urged mourners to reject hate and to take comfort in their faith at his funeral Friday, in the church where he was gunned down five days earlier."On Sunday, my husband didn't die. He simply got a promotion," Cindy Winters said. She raised a hand to the sky as the "Movin' on Up" theme from "The Jeffersons" blared from the loudspeakers and the standing-room-only crowd rose to its feet at First Baptist Church in this St. Louis suburb.Fred Winters was eulogized as a coupon-clipping brainiac who never forgot a name and a devoted family man whose love for basketball was outmatched by his passion for the Bible.The 45-year-old had a bachelor's degree, two master's degrees and a doctorate, but his wife joked,"I could never teach him how to fold laundry." Winters' closed casket was just feet from where his life ended Sunday, when authorities say Terry Sedlacek, 27, entered the church with a .45-caliber Glock handgun and enough bullets to kill 30 people. Investigators say his eyes were fixed on the preacher as he walked down an aisle toward the altar.The first shot clipped the Bible Winters was clutching, sending pieces of it spraying like confetti in what some of the 150 onlookers thought at first was a skit.After Sedlacek's gun jammed, police say, he pulled out a knife and wrestled with two congregants who subdued him. All three were wounded.None of Friday's speakers mentioned Sedlacek by name, instead casting the slaying as the work of Satan and the forces of evil. The theme: Channel the grief into greater spirituality."Our vision and our purpose still remains the same," Cindy Winters told mourners, some of whom watched a video feed from a nearby gymnasium because the church was packed."You know what? I refuse to let Satan win," she continued."I'm not going to hate. And I'm not going to survive this thing-I'm going to be a better person because of this thing."Winters said her two young daughters told her, "I want everyone to come to know Jesus through this.I hope the man who did this learns to love Jesus."She also quoted the children as saying that Sunday was not "death day" for their father, a reference to the phrase the alleged gunman wrote in his day planner."It was celebration day, the best day of his life" because he reached heaven, they said.Sedlacek was being held without bond in Madison County jail on charges of murder and armed criminal action after being transferred from St. Louis to Illinois on Friday afternoon. He had been hospitalized in St. Louis for treatment of self-inflicted stab wounds, then spent Thursday night in the St. Louis city jail."The reasons may not be fully understood until we get to glory and are reunited," said Tim Cowin, a pastor at St. Louis' Rock Hill Baptist Church."I believe in all my heart that Pastor Fred died as a hero and as a martyr"-a hero for perhaps drawing the gunman's fire away from Sunday's crowd, martyr because he died in spiritual service.Referring to what authorities said was Sedlacek's calm walk down the aisle before opening fire, the Rev. Bob Dickerson, a former minister at the church, told mourners:"I can't help but think the first thought Fred had just those moments before this terrible deed was...here's somebody that can't wait to receive Jesus Christ and that's why he stepped out to greet him in those few moments."
By Associated Press Writer
Jim Suhr

As in the days of Noah....

Pastor Killed in Ill. Church Shooting

A gunman walked down the aisle of a church during a Sunday service and killed the pastor, then stabbed himself and slashed two other people as parishioners wrestled him to the ground, authorities said.

Pastor Dead, 2 Injured After Shooting at a First Baptist Church in Illinois

An Illinois pastor was shot and killed, and two parishioners injured after an unknown gunman opened fire during Sunday services at the First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill.A gunman walked down the church aisle and briefly spoke to the pastor before shooting during the 8:15 a.m service.Rev. Fred Winters used the Bible he was reading from to shield himself from the first round of bullets being pumped at him, a parishioner told FOX News.The gunman's .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol jammed after the fourth shot was fired. The suspect then started stabbing himself with a four-inch knife, Ralph Timmins of the Illinois State Police told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.Timmins said the gunman slashed two parishioners when they tried to subdue him.Rev.Winters was shot three times, and was pronounced dead at Anderson Hospital.The gunman and one stabbing victim, 39-year-old Terry Bullard, underwent surgery at St. Louis University Hospital, spokeswoman Laura Keller said. Bullard was in serious condition, she said.The other victim, Keith Melton, was treated and released from Gateway Regional Medical Center, spokeswoman Kate Allaria said. A man who answered the phone at a listing for Keith Melton in Troy identified himself as Melton's stepson and said Melton had been stabbed but was going to be fine.Illinois State Police say they are 99 percent sure they have the identity of the suspect, but have not released his name pending possible charges. They have confirmed he is 27-years-old and from Troy, Ill.The Rev. Mark Jones, another pastor at First Baptist, said he did not recognize the gunman, who Jones saw briefly before he pulled his weapon. Jones then went into an adjacent room and did not see the shooting, though he heard a sound like miniature fire crackers."We have no idea what this guy's motives were," Jones said outside the church."We don't know if we'll ever know that."Police said there were about 150 people in the church at the time of the shooting.Linda Cunningham was sitting near the back of the church when the gunman walked up the aisle. She told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch she figured the man was confused about what time the service started because of daylight savings time.Cunningham told the Post-Dispatch she, as well as others, didn't recognize the gunman.Some parishioners believe the gunman used church bulletins to conceal his weapon."All you could see was confetti" Cunningham told the Post-Dispatch.The church has an average attendance of more than 1,200 and was officially organized on March 4, 1945, according to their Web site.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
As in the days of Noah...

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

INDIA:"Pastor Shot in Bomb Attack on Church";Attacker said he aimed to stop Christian conversions;Hindu extremist connection suspected.

NEW DELHI, March 10 (Compass Direct News)In an effort to stop conversions to Christianity in the eastern state of Bihar, a 25-year-old ailing man on Sunday (March 8) exploded a crude bomb in a church and shot the pastor.Police Inspector Hari Krishna Mandal told Compass that the attacker, Rajesh Singh, had come fully prepared to kill the pastor, Vinod Kumar, in Baraw village in the Nasriganj area of Rohtas district, and then take his own life.“However,”Mandal said, “believers caught him before he could do more damage or kill himself.”The 35-year-old pastor was taken to a hospital in nearby Varanasi, in the neighboring state of Uttar Pradesh and at press time was out of danger of losing his life, according to a leader of Gospel Echoing Missionary Society (GEMS) who requested anonymity.The church, Prarthana Bhawan (House of Prayer), belongs to GEMS.Around 30 people were in the church when the attack took place. Some women in the church sustained burns in the blast.“Rajesh Singh threw a crude bomb from the window of the church, and the sound of the explosion created a chaos in the congregation,” said Inspector Mandal. As members of the church began to run out, he added, Singh came into the building and shot the pastor with a handmade pistol from point-blank range.Singh had more bombs to explode and three more bullets in his pistol, but church members caught hold of him and handed him over to police, the inspector said.“In his statement, Singh said he was personally against Christian conversions and wanted to kill the pastor to stop conversions,” Mandal said. “He wanted to take his own life after killing the pastor, and this is why he had more bullets in his pistol and an overdose of anesthesia in a syringe.”Asked if Singh had any links with extremist Hindu nationalist groups, the inspector said no such organization was active in the area, though local Christians say Hindu extremist presence has increased recently. The GEMS source said people allegedly linked with a Hindu nationalist group had sent a threatening letter to the pastor, asking him to stop preaching in the area.The source said the incident could have been fallout from conversions in nearby Mithnipur village, where a Hindu family had received Christ after being healed from a mental illness around six months ago. Singh also lives in Mithnipur.“Pastor Kumar had not been visiting the village, fearing opposition from the villagers who were not happy with the conversion of this family,” the GEMS source said. “The same church’s cross had also been damaged about a year ago by unidentified people.”The source said he believes that although Singh’s affiliation or linkage with a Hindu nationalist group has not been established, it is likely that he was instigated to kill the pastor by an extremist group. Pastor Kumar, married with three children, has been working in Rohtas district for the last 12 years.Local Christians complain that the presence of the Hindu extremist Sangh Parivar (a family of organizations linked with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or RSS, India’s chief Hindu nationalist group) has recently increased in the area. They say the Hindu nationalist conglomerate has been spewing hate against Christians for more than 10 years, accusing them of using monetary incentives and fraudulent means and foreign money to convert Hindus.The attacker has an amputated hand and was said to be mentally disturbed since 1996, when he was diagnosed with cancer, Inspector Mandal said.“According to the villagers,” he said, “Singh had been mentally disturbed ever since he was diagnosed with cancer, and later tuberculosis, although there is no medical report to substantiate this.”The government of Bihar is ruled by a coalition of a regional party, the Janata Dal-United (JD-U) party, and the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The JD-U is also part of the National Democratic Alliance, the main opposition coalition at the federal level led by the BJP. The JD-U, however, is not perceived as a supporter of Hindu nationalism.Of the 82 million people, mostly Hindu, in Bihar, only 53,137 are Christian, according to the 2001 census.
http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5845&backpage=summaries&critere=&countryname=&rowcur=
As in the days of Noah...

Pakistan: Christian nurse under fire over Muslim prayer room

The Christian chief warden of a nurses’ hall of residence in Lahore is at risk of attack from a fanatical Muslim colleague, warns CLAAS UK.Mrs Purses Gulzereen is chief warden at the hall for women training at the nursing school of the Children’s Hospital, where she is a senior lecturer. For the last six months, Mrs Purses has been embroiled in a conflict with a senior trainee doctor, Dr Naila of the Rehaim Yar Khan district, who has been living in the hall for the last two years. Dr Naila, who is believed to have links to some fanatical Islamic organisations, demanded around eight months ago that the 400 Muslim girls living at the hall be granted their own special prayer room. With the consent of the hall administration, Mrs Purses provided a large hall where the Muslim students could offer their prayers five times a day and hold religious gatherings.The Christian girls in the hall, numbering around 80, subsequently requested their own prayer room and, with the consent of the administration, Mrs Purses offered them a small room, which she furnished with money from her personal funds and also provided Bibles and other related reading material.Dr Naila, however, reportedly became aggressive towards the Christian girls and hall staff after they were granted their own prayer space, but especially towards Mrs Purses.In particular, Dr Naila wrote letters to the administration complaining that Mrs Purses was granting special favours to the Christian members of staff and that she was using the Christian prayer room to spread Christianity around the hall, convert the Muslim girls to Christianity, and westernise the hall’s Islamic character.Fanatical Muslim students reportedly came together with Dr Naila in acting aggressively after the establishment of the Christian prayer room. The hospital administration responded by ordering Mrs Purses to close down the Christian prayer room but she argued that if the Christian prayer room were to be closed down, the Muslim prayer room should also be closed. The administration took the decision to close both prayer rooms.Dr Naila then reportedly misled local newspapers by telling them the Christian chief warden of the hall had closed down a mosque and stopped Muslim students and staff from offering their prayers, thereby preventing them from fulfilling their religious duties. She also repeated her previous allegation that Mrs Purses had tried to spread Christianity among the students at the hall.Meanwhile, Dr Naila distributed Muslim literature to the students, including the Christians, whom she invited to embrace Islam. When the hospital administration told Dr Naila to stop such activities at Mrs Purses’ behest, Dr Naila suspected the chief warden’s intervention and started a campaign for her dismissal, as well as that of two Christian assistant wardens.She also reportedly started telling the Muslim nurses that all hall staff must be Muslims and that Islam was in danger under Christian management.The hospital administration reportedly became alarmed because of Dr Naila’s close links with fanatical Islamic organisations.
Two Christian assistant wardens were subsequently dismissed from their posts and two Muslim nurses appointed in their place. The administration also reportedly want to replace Mrs Purses as chief warden but have yet to find a candidate who matches her in suitability, seeing as she has managed the hall since it first opened.Mrs Purses says she has received threatening calls from unidentified individuals telling her to let the Muslim students have their prayer room back. The hospital administration has told her it cannot help her in this matter and it has warned her that an Islamic organisation is on the look out for her.Mrs Purses has contacted CLAAS for help in finding a solution to the conflict. She fears particularly for the safety of her husband and three children. The CLAAS legal team has assured Mrs Purses of its help.

As in the days of Noah...

Sunday, March 8, 2009

SRI LANKA:Anti-conversion law may draw more to faith

Sri Lanka (MNN)-Throughout the world, it remains that wherever persecution increases,growth in the church increases as well.This truth brings hope to believers in Sri Lanka as it seems a proposed anti-conversion law will inevitably be passed.Vice President of Gospel for Asia Danny Yohannan says that, if passed, the new law will keep people from "coercion," essentially implying that Christians cannot give food to the starving or shelter for the homeless with the intent of ever sharing the Gospel.Yohannan notes that proposed laws have been kept vague on purpose. "They try to keep it as general as possible so they can really catch anyone doing anything to put them in prison."The law will be voted on officially sometime this month. If passed, it may cause GFA missionaries to come up with more subtle ways of sharing the Gospel. But Yohannan says it will undoubtedly be spread more than ever. GFA and many other Mission Network News mission partners have experienced growth in the church as it comes under heavy scrutiny."What we've seen, like in Orissa [India] with the persecution that happened a few months ago, is that there was actually more people coming to Christ and more churches being planted because of this. So if they do pass this law, what we're going to see is actually more people getting saved. People will think, ‘Why did they pass this law? Why are they doing this toward Christians?' Then they're going to ask, ‘What do Christians believe?' And then they're going to come to Christ."GFA missionaries in the country have not been deterred by the proposed bill. Yohannan says they expect persecution when they become followers of Christ and will continue to be trained in the Bible and evangelism.In the meantime, GFA needs your help. Funding is necessary to maintain programs and to sponsor missionaries in Sri Lanka and surrounding countries.
If you can help with this, click here.
But more than anything, please pray.
"Every believer can pray, at least every single day, that God would raise up more laborers for the work of the harvest."

As in the days of Noah..

Religious freedom attacked in Myanmar

Myanmar (MNN)-At least 100 churches have been forced to stop holding services in Myanmar (Burma) after military officials made some 50 pastors sign documents promising to do so. They were told that if they did not comply, they would be jailed.According to Gospel for Asia, Myanmar has been held under an oppressive military regime since 1962. Many believe that the recent violation of religious freedom was an attempt by the military regime to put a stop to Christianity altogether in the country.Myanmar is 89 percent Buddhist, and the regime does not look lightly on conversions. Some Christians speculate that the military has been keeping a keen eye on them since they began relief work after the May 2008 cyclone, nervous that Christianity would spread as a result.Most frightening about the recent moves to eliminate church services is the potential threat to personal worship. Most churches that have had to cease meeting are home churches, making Christians anxious that they may no longer be able to worship in their homes.Gospel for Asia reported that all of the affected churches have been in the Yangon (Rangoon) area, and none of its churches have been directly affected by the deliberate infringements.GFA missionaries, however, are certainly not left without concern.They ask for prayer that the Lord would change the hearts of political leaders in Myanmar for justice in regard to religious freedom. They also ask for prayers for wisdom and steadfastness for believers and missionaries in the region. Pray that the Lord would do a mighty work in Myanmar and that the church would continue to grow despite obstacles.
To learn more about GFA's work within Myanmar, click here. http://www.mnnonline.org/article/12345

As in the days of Noah...

Underground - The youth division of Open Doors

Open Doors - Serving Persecuted Christians worldwide. Underground is the youth division of Open Doors which exists to raise awareness of the plight of over 200 Million Christians worldwide.

KENYA:'Church Struggling after Islamists destroy building;Six months after attack,Muslim assailants still at large,weary congregation faces heat,rain

Church Still Meeting in Open Air
GARISSA, Kenya, March 5(Compass Direct News)Six months after a gang of Muslim youths ruined a church building in this town in northern Kenya, Christians still worshipping in the sweltering heat of the open air say they feel disillusioned that officials have done nothing to punish the culprits or restore their structure.On a sunny afternoon last Sept. 14, when angry Muslim youths threw more than 400 members of the Redeemed Gospel Church out of their church building, the Christians hoped they would be able to return to the ruins of their former structure. That hope is quickly giving way to anger, hopelessness and despair.“After six months in the open, the church feels tired and cheated,” said pastor David Matolo. “We are fed up with the empty promises from the government administration.”He said the church, which began worshipping in Garissa in early 2001 with only a dozen members, is fast shrinking.Our church membership has decreased, which is of great concern to me,” he told Compass.“The church thinks that the government has decided to buy time-almost every month I do book appointments with the relevant authorities, who on several occasions have given us a deaf ear.”Since the attack, church members have been meeting at the town show grounds. Just a few miles from the Somali border, the site has few trees to protect the congregation from the scorching sun, with temperatures ranging from 92 to 104 degrees F (30 to 40 degrees C).Asked why he thought government officials were reluctant to grant the church a permanent place of worship as promised, an irritated Matolo did not hesitate to reply.“The administration has decided, ‘kutesa [inflict pain on us],’ always making promises that never come to pass,” he said.“At times the provincial commissioner deliberately decides not to take my phone calls. I have had a painful experience.”Matolo said he has asked the administration either to allow the church to build a new structure on land lying idle near a police training college or to let them return to their original site.“We are ready for any eventuality,” he said.“We feel that the administration is not concerned about our spiritual welfare.”Asked about the pastor’s complaints, provincial police officer Stephen Chelimo told Compass,“The issue at the moment is not within my docket, but wholly rests upon the provincial commissioner.”But Provincial Commissioner Stephen Maingi said the onus rested on the district commissioner. “Let the district commissioner sort this issue with the pastor,” Maingi said.District Commissioner Onyango Ogango, in turn, indicated the church itself was the source of problems.“If the church is allowed to return to their original site, we will expect a fight to erupt with the Muslims,” Ogango said.“Earlier on, the church began very well during its initial stage of inception with controlled worship, but later it turned out to hold noisy prayers and loud songs.”Further questioned about these allegations, however, Ogango said he would call the pastor to discuss a resolution. Even so, Matolo said previous contact with the district commissioner did not leave him with high expectations.“Our district commissioner seemed to have no feelings for our predicament,” he said. “The faces of the congregation members speak a lot.”A glance at the worshippers confirmed his appraisal. They looked weary and anxious, with impending April rains expected to add to the indignity of their situation. Matolo said his congregation feels that soon it will be difficult to worship at all.Even a temporary home did not appear to be forthcoming. The pastor said their request for a site near the provincial commissioner’s residence was dismissed on the grounds that it would create a security concern.
Radical Islamic Influence
Tensions between Christians and the Muslim-majority population in the semi-desert town of 20,000 people began in June 2007, when Muslims built a mosque too close to the church building-only three meters separated the two structures.Matolo said pleas to District Commissioner Ogango did nothing to reverse the encroachment of Muslim worshippers.Land issues alone have not been responsible for tensions in the area. The Rev. Ibrahim Kamwaro, chairman of the Pastors’ Fellowship in Garissa, said Matolo had offended Muslims when he preached to a lame Muslim man. Muslims were said to be upset that the pastor persuaded the disabled man to stop going to the mosque and instead join his church.Matolo’s alleged promise to the disabled man of a better life offended area Muslims, Rev. Kamwaro said.Christians feel increasingly hunted and haunted as the spread of Islamic extremism is fast gaining ground in this town, located about 400 kilometers (249 miles) from Nairobi, the capital.In neighboring Somalia, newly elected President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed on Feb. 28 offered the introduction of sharia (Islamic law) in exchange for a truce with a rebel extremist group said to have ties to al Qaeda, al Shabaab; the rebels said they would keep fighting. Many fear that Muslim youths in this lawless part of Kenya will be tempted to adopt the radical, uncompromising posture of the fighters.To date, the gang of more than 50 Muslim youths who attacked worshippers and brought their church to ruins have not been apprehended. Members of the congregation feel justice is increasingly elusive.In Garissa, Muslims restrict churches in other ways. Christians are not allowed to pray, sing or use musical instruments in rented homes owned by Muslims. No teaching of Christian Religious Education in schools is allowed; only Islamic Religious Knowledge is taught.Garissa has more than 15 Christian denominations, including the East Africa Pentecostal Church, the Redeemed Gospel Church, the Anglican Church, Deliverance Church, Full Gospel Churches of Kenya and the African Inland Church.
As in the days of Noah...

EGYPT: Law Granting twins to muslim to be Reviewed;Christian mother wins right to high court appeal regarding ruling that favored Muslim father

ISTANBUL(Compass Direct News)Prosecutor General Abdel Meguid Mahmoud last week granted the mother of 14-year-old twins Andrew and Mario Medhat Ramses the right to appeal a custody decision awarding her sons to their Muslim father.Muslim convert Medhat Ramses Labib gained custody of the boys last September, contrary to Article 20 of Egypt’s Personal Status Law, which states children should remain with their mother until age 15. The boys’ mother, Kamilia Lotfy Gaballah, won the right to appeal on Feb. 11.“We all have a little bit of hope, new hope,” said George Ramses, the twins’ older brother. “Of course, they are a little afraid about everything, but generally they are excited.” With support from the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), Gaballah will appeal the Family Court’s decision awarding custody to the father before the Court of Cassation. Family Court decisions are not usually given recourse to the Court of Cassation, one of Egypt’s highest courts, and require special referral from a public prosecutor.EIPR Director Hossam Bahgat stressed that the Court of Cassation will be examining the law on which the decision was based, not the decision itself.
“The Court of Cassation will pronounce a decision on the legal rule that Christian children, when one of their parents converts to Islam, should be automatically moved to the Muslim parent’s custody,” he said. “So it is very important in terms of changing the legal rule, but according to the law it will not have a direct impact on Andrew and Mario themselves.”Preliminary hearings are scheduled to begin on March 2.The twins will celebrate their 15th birthday in June of this year. At 15, Egyptian children of divorcees have the legal right to choose which parent they want to live with. Ramses told Compass that he is skeptical about whether his brothers will be given this right.“The whole law is that kids should spend the first 15 years with their mum, and then they get to choose who they want to live with,” Ramses said.“Choosing is the second part of the rule that was not applied to us, so we don’t know actually what will be the case.”The boys’ father, Labib, converted to Islam in 1999 after divorcing Gaballah to marry another woman. In 2006 Labib altered the official religious status of the boys and later applied for custody.
Covenant Breaches
The boys are now at the center of two separate disputes, both of which have roots in the complex interaction between Islamic and secular law in Egypt: whether children should be automatically awarded to the Muslim parent, and whether they therefore should automatically convert to Islam.Custody battles between Muslim fathers and Christian mothers have typically been instances where Islamic law has predominated over secular legislation. Sharia (Islamic law), which the Egyptian constitution declares as being the source of law, states that a non-Muslim should not have authority over a Muslim.In the case of Andrew and Mario, this sharia provision meant that they should not be left under the jurisdiction of their non-Muslim mother. The automatic and compulsory conversion of the twins, following their father’s decision to become Muslim, is the second area of contention EIPR is working on behalf of Gaballah to resolve.The issue once again shows the contradictory stances of Egyptian civil law, which reflects both freedom of religion and Islamic thought. A fatwa (religious edict) issued by Egypt’s Grand Mufti, Ali Gomaa, regarding the case of Andrew and Mario states, “The religion of the two children should follow their Muslim father’s, unless they change their religion with full will after puberty.”Although this statement allows Andrew and Mario the right to choose their religion “after puberty,” conversion from Islam is not only extremely difficult in Egypt but also dangerous.Egypt has ratified a number of human rights treaties allowing advocacy groups like EIPR recourse to international watchdogs and advisory bodies.One of these, the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR), has agreed to examine the case.The commission has asked both parties to submit written statements by March in preparation for an initial hearing in May.The European Union of Coptic Organisations for Human Rights (EUCOHR) has also weighed in, petitioning the European Parliament for help.“We have gone to the European Parliament with a legal document detailing about 30 to 40 breaches of international covenants like the International Declaration of Human Rights,” said Ibrahim Habib, vice-chairman of EUCOHR.Habib said he hopes involving international bodies such as these will raise the profile of the case and put pressure on the Egyptian judiciary to rule impartially. Such attention could also have positive implications for the much harassed Coptic community at large.The report filed by EUCOHR and the U. S. Coptic Foundation for Legal Assistance, which explores violations of such pacts as the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, ends with this statement:“This is a call for justice and to save the two children from the coercion, persecution and injustice with which they are overburdened and, it is respectfully requested that a prompt action be taken to save those children and their future. Also, the annulment of the judgements against the two children is promptly requested.”

As in the days of Noah...

WALK IN THEIR SHOES

Over 200 Million Christians are persecuted for their Faith in Jesus everyday.Underground challenges you to 'Walk in Their Shoes'...Hebrews 13:3 "Remember those who are in prison as if you were their fellow prisoners, and those who are mistreated as if you yourselves were suffering."
USE YOUR FREEDOM - SUPPORT SECRET BELIEVERS
http://www.secretbelievers.org/

PS:Get involved....!Wear the shoelaces...!!!!Walk in their shoes...!!!
As in the days of Noah...

Time-Zone Crossing Prayer Wave to Circle Planet

A spiritual “shockwave” will start to make its way around the world in less than 12 hours as young Christians from Malaysia to the United States join together from their respective countries to pray for the millions of fellow believers who are persecuted for their faith in Jesus Christ.Starting on March 6 from New Zealand, youths there will kick off the annual 72-hour global prayer event called “Shockwave” that will traverse time zones and move through at least 30 countries worldwide.Some of the countries with scheduled Shockwave prayer events include Australia, India, Malaysia, Japan, South Africa, the Netherlands, Norway, Ireland, Scotland, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Canada and the United States.During the prayer event, which ends on Sunday, youth groups and student ministries will organize young Christians to pray for persecuted Christians in Shockwave chat rooms, prayer meetings, at churches, and in homes. Some Shockwave prayer events will be all night, while others will take place in the evening or at a prayer breakfast.“Shockwave is a movement of prayer that allows the passion of young people’s hearts to be heard by God as we cry out and join together across the world in solidarity with our persecuted brothers and sisters,” says Scott Ahern, director of Innovative Strategies for Open Doors USA, in a statement.“This is truly a witness of the unity of the body of Christ when youth from different cultures, ethnic backgrounds and regions of the world join to pray for one cause-to lift up and support through prayer God’s suffering children,” he says.“I encourage you to journey with us for this exciting international event.”Shockwave is organized by Underground, the youth and student ministry of Open Doors, a ministry that supports persecuted churches and Christians.Students are asked to meditate on the verse found in Hebrews 13:2, which reads: “Remember those in prison as if you were their fellow prisoners, and those who are mistreated as if you yourself were suffering.”An estimated 100 million Christians worldwide suffer from interrogation, arrest and even death for their faith in Christ, with million more facing discrimination and alienation, according to Open Doors. The ministry helps believers in countries hostile to Christianity through Bible and Christian literature distribution, leadership training and assistance, Christian community development, prayer and advocacy on behalf of persecuted believers.Some of the countries with the worst Christian persecution record include North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan, Somalia, Maldives, Yemen, Laos, Eritrea, and Uzbekistan, according to Open Doors’ 2009 World Watch List.
On the Web: www.odshockwave.org
By Michelle A. Vu
Christian Post Reporter

As in the days of Noah...

Anti-conversion bill coming to India's Karnataka?

India (MNN)The Hindu nationalist government in the southern state of Karnataka is planning to introduce an "anti-conversion" law that led to anti-Christian violence in other states. Karnataka recorded the second-highest number of attacks on Christians last year.Todd Nettleton(Left on picture with Greg Yoder at the NRB convention 2009)with Voice of the Martyrs says,"One of the things that this law might possibly require is for someone to stand in front of a magistrate and make the statement, 'I am changing my religion.' That would basically paint a target on that person's back and make him a potential victim of persecution and attacks."According to Nettleton, many Hindu extremists say these laws are needed because Christians are forcing Hindus to convert."Yet, when you actually study the fact and study the cases in one state, in 10 years there have been three cases. Only two of those involved Christians. So really, this law seeks to elevate a problem that actually doesn't exist."This law will only do more to create fear for Christians and do nothing to protect their rights as many Christians are forced to renounce their faith or threatened with violence. "I am not aware of any case where a Hindu has been prosecuted under the anti-conversion law for forcing someone to become Hindu." While persecution across India increases, Voice of the Martyrs is doing all they can to help the church. They're providing humanitarian aid, Christian books, Bibles, and ministry materials, but they're also helping the families who've been affected by persecution. "Some in Orissa have lost their homes. Some have been martyred for their faith, and we are able to help their families and help them financially to keep going on, even after the loss of the husband, the father and bread winner." A fund is available to help these suffering servants. "All of the money that comes into the fund goes directly to support families of those who are killed for their faith, those who make great sacrifices for the Gospel."
If you'd like to help Voice of the Martyrs care for Families of Martyrs, click here.
As in the days of Noah....

Fear spreads again through Orissa

India (MNN)The slaying of another Christian in India's Orissa state has rekindled persecution fears.Because this has not been an isolated incident, church leaders have raised their eyebrows on the government's security guarantees of safety for believers. Earlier this year,India's Supreme Court ordered the state government of Orissa to protect the tens of thousands of Christians being targeted by Hindu extremists.Tensions remained high even as the situation seemed to be resolving.With the newest discovery, there are fears that the region could erupt again.The body of 40-year-old Hrudayananda Nayak was found in a jungle near his home village of Rudangia, in Kandhamal district last Thursday.Once the worst of the violence in the region appeared to have settled down,Nayak left the relief camp where he had taken refuge and returned to his home village. Within 24 hours, he was dead. One church leader noted that Nayak was the fourth Christian to be abducted and killed after violence ebbed down by the end of October.JP Sundararajan with Audio Scripture Ministries says they've heard an alarming rumor. "The rumor-and it hasn't been really substantiated at this point-was that every 23rd of the month, or around that time,one Christian would be killed to commemorate the anniversary of this extremist who got gunned down." The violence that broke out in August of last year was sparked after Hindu fundamentalists accused Christians of slaying a local Hindu leader on Aug. 23, 2008, for which the Maoists had repeatedly claimed responsibility.Earlier this month the state government had announced the shutdown of relief camps in Kandhamal district.The National Council of Churches in India says victims are reluctant to return to their villages, due to increasing threats demanding "re-conversion to Hinduism."Whether or not Nayak's murder was connected to the rumor remains to be seen. Sundararajan says with the violence last fall and early this year, they've been in close contact with their team in Orissa.Sundararajan says they've found that "there has been tremendous growth in these areas where there have been terrible incidents of persecution."That's all that they need to move forward, despite the safety concerns.Sundararajan says there's a lot at stake."Next week, we're actually going into Orissa to do probably one of the biggest Scripture distributions that we have ever done.It's among the tribals-the people who have been undergoing the brunt of the persecution, the people who have been in the relief camps."
--Pray for safety and wisdom for their teams during the distributions.
As in the days of Noah...

16 Members of Congress Urge Secretary of State Clinton to Address Human Rights in China

USA-Prior to Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi’s visit to the U.S. on March 9, 16 members of the U.S. Congress sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urging her to make certain her conversations with the Chinese government are consistent with the true state of deteriorating human rights conditions in China. The letter, which had bipartisan support, was issued in response to Secretary Clinton’s controversial remarks before and during her visit to China indicating a retreat on the priority of human rights issues in U.S.-China relations. Traveling to China February 20-22, Clinton met with Chinese President Hu Jintao and other leaders. She has been criticized by human rights groups for publically commenting that concerns about human rights abuses in China must not interfere with cooperation on the economic crisis, global warming and other issues.In their letter, the members of Congress also expressed their hope of “an Ambassador in Beijing who will be pro-active and engaged in the promotion of human rights with the highest level of the Chinese government” and their desire and willingness to work with the Secretary of State and the State Department to promote human rights throughout the world.ChinaAid commends the 16 signatories of the letter: Joseph R. Pitts (PA, 16th), Tim Ryan (OH, 17th), Trent Franks (AZ, 2nd), Bob Inglis (SC, 4th), Frank Wolf (VA, 10th), Mike Rogers (AL, 3rd), Mike Pence (IN, 6th), Dan Burton (IN, 5th), Michele Bachmann (MN, 6th), Scott Garrett (NJ, 5th), Michael Michaud (ME, 2nd), Chris Smith (NJ, 4th), Randy Neugebauer (TX, 19th), Thaddeus McCotter (MI, 11th), Donald Manzullo (IL, 16th) and John Boozman (AR, 3rd).
The following is the text of the letter: (Click here to view the original letter.)
U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
Dear Secretary Clinton,
Congratulations on your recent confirmation as Secretary of State. There is no doubt that challenges lie ahead, but we look forward to working together to confront these challenges in the most effective way possible.
We commend you for addressing some of the common challenges facing China and the United States, such as security threats, weakened economies, and environmental concerns, during your recent trip to China. However, these complicated, multi-lateral issues will only be solved when the government and its people work together, with justice and mutual respect. These issues cannot and should not be separated from concerns about human rights and the rule of law. As long as practices of forced abortions, imprisonment of human rights lawyers, and persecution of unregistered churches continue, the people of China will be neither free nor safe.
It is ironic that the Chinese government, while claiming to pursue a harmonious society, simultaneously allows policies which bring harassment on those seeking to follow the law and serve in humanitarian projects. Yet, this is the case for house church Christians and many other religious groups throughout China. They first find their religious freedom denied, then their right to privacy, right to freedom of speech, and right to freedom of association.
The State Department Human Rights Report which was released on February 25th clearly describes a deterioration of human rights conditions in China during 2008. Please make certain that your conversations with the Chinese government are consistent with the findings of this report. We also look forward to an Ambassador in Beijing who will be pro-active and engaged in the promotion of human rights with the highest levels of the Chinese government. Lastly, we express our desire and willingness to work with you and your colleagues at the State Department to ensure continued U.S. involvement and leadership in promoting human rights throughout the world.
Sincerely,
Joseph R. Pitts
Tim Ryan
Trent Franks
Bob Inglis
Frank Wolf
Mike Rogers (AL)
Mike Pence
Dan Burton
Michele Bachmann
Scott Garrett
Michael Michaud
Chris Smith
Randy Neugebauer
Thaddeus McCotter
Donald Manzullo
John Boozman
Call or write to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urging her to address human rights issues in China including the persecution of house church Christians. Click here to send an e-mail.
Communication Division:
PA/PL, Rm. 2206
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20520
As in the days of Noah...

Bob Fu Speaks at Press Conference Regarding Secretary of State Clinton’s Controversial Remarks on Human Rights in China

Press conference speakers
Bob Fu speaks at the press conference
WASHINGTON, D.C.-Today, at 11 a.m. Bob Fu, President and Founder of ChinaAid, spoke at a press conference at the Cannon House Office Building in Washington, D.C. regarding U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s controversial remarks over the past week indicating a retreat on the priority of human rights issues in U.S.-China relations.Traveling to China last weekend, Clinton met with Chinese President Hu Jintao and other leaders, while failing to meet with dissidents during her stay.She has been criticized by human rights groups for publically announcing that U.S. concerns about human rights abuses in China must not interfere with cooperation on the economic crisis, global warming and other issues.Also present at the press conference were former Chinese political prisoners Wei Jingsheng,Harry Wu,and Rebiya Kadeer; Sharon Hom, Executive Director of Human Rights in China, as well as other Chinese human rights activists. Congressman Christopher Smith (NJ-4th), GOP Conference Chairman Mike Pence (IN-6th),Congressmen Frank Wolf (VA-10th) and Joe Pitts (PA-16th), leading human rights advocates in Congress, hosted the press conference.
The following are Bob Fu’s prepared remarks for the press conference:
Thank you, Congressmen Chris Smith, Joe Pitts, Frank Wolf, and Mike Pence, for your leadership in hosting this discussion, and thank you, my co-panelists, for your insights and continued sacrifices for freedom in China.Sometimes challenging circumstances can force us to search for resources we may have not yet noticed.It is clear that the U.S. and China share some challenging circumstances right now.Among other issues, we share security crises, economic crises, and environmental crises.Yet it is distressing that during her visit to China, Secretary Clinton seemed to discount a primary “resource” for stability and overcoming crises: China’s own people-not just the ruling elite but the minorities, the house church Christians, the human rights defense lawyers, others.Perhaps sometimes they seem like “small potatoes”; yet, the small potatoes are often the best seed for the next crop.We want to look beyond the immediate to the future-the next generation: who in China is building a strong foundation of justice, rule of law of Nature and of Nature’s God, and “inalienable rights”?How can we support these rebuilders; these people of vision, hope, and change?The State Department’s Human Rights Report was released yesterday.It reported human rights conditions in China deteriorated in 2008.ChinaAid’s 2008 annual persecution report (available at ChinaAid.org) also reports increased persecution for house church Christians.The hand of the Chinese government seems open to U.S. T-bills, while showing a fist to its own people.We do not need to be afraid to press human rights issues: if the Chinese government’s fist is closed to input now, we can go directly to the people within China; people whose hands are open to receive help, advice, encouragement, and support.In fact, they are the best investment for promoting China as friend and partner in years to come.I think it seems wiser than empowering a brutal regime.A nominee for the 2008 Nobel Peace Prize has been missing for three weeks now after being kidnapped from his home-human rights defense lawyer Gao Zhisheng.Perhaps some of his words did not sit well with the Communist Party, but if they did have a legitimate right in their path of torturous treatment,they would have no fear of this man,or of his colleague Guo Feixiong who is serving 5-year sentence because he promoted rule of law.In justice is strength.Do not think history will look only at the response of the Secretary of State, or this Administration, or Congress, to place responsibility for the U.S. condoning tolerance of China’s human rights abuses: it is the responsibility of the people of the United States.I call upon my fellow citizens in the U.S, to support life and justice in China with your vote, your checkbook, your phone call to your government representatives and within your sphere of influence.I ask this on behalf of my brothers and sisters in China-many of whom risk life and freedom simply to meet together. Many who have lost freedom, are now imprisoned, and look for our help.Alimujiang Yimiti is a minority of a minority; he is a Christian Uyghur.Though he could be well-positioned to facilitate understanding between two distinct cultures, instead he has been in prison for more than a year-but he has not yet been convicted of any crime.Wusiman Yiming and Lou Yuanqi-both are also imprisoned, and so is businessman Shi Weihan.We learned the basic reason these four men are imprisoned is because they are Christians and engaged in Christian activities. This is not good investment of the Chinese justice system, or promotion of a harmonious civil society.While Secretary Clinton was visiting in China, Christians were sitting in their cold prison cells and working in labor camps around the clock. What message were they expecting her to deliver from the leader of the free world?At the very least, they expected her to say, “Brothers and sisters, we are with you while you are suffering.”The Secretary is quoted as saying that the U.S. and China “will rise and fall together.” This is an interesting thought. Will we fall with a deceptive regime who continues to terrorize innocent citizens, while we try to find temporary cooperation on this or that issue? Or will we rise with a nation with whom we promote human rights as part of holistic dialogue?
Thank you.
Bob Fu
ChinaAid
As in the days of Noah...

Radio Free Asia Reports on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s Visit to China; Many Christians and Pro-Democracy Activists Placed under Surveillance

BEIJING-Radio Free Asia (RFA) released the following report on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit to China, indicating that, during her visit, many Christians and Pro-Democracy Activists were placed under surveillance and are still being held by authorities.RFA reported that Secretary Clinton met with 20 representatives of women’s’ groups and congratulated a woman who had worked on behalf of AIDS victims for her work and for exposing the government. However, in a press conference in South Korea, prior to her visit to China, she indicated that human rights would not be the focus of her visit, rather she would emphasize the economy and trade.A Chinese news source http://www.newcenturynews.com/Article/china/200902/20090225003240.html
which had a separate interview with the AIDs activist Dr. Gao Yaojie reported that she said among the women invited to the embassy to meet with Secretary Clinton, she found that “many were organized by the Chinese government,” although she said she did not believe Secretary Clinton knew that was the case.“While we commend the Secretary’s willingness to meet with a few women leaders including AIDs activist Dr. Gao Yaojie in the US Embassy in Beijing, it’s rather inconsistent and even contradictory to her previous remarks that human rights issues will be a ‘non-interference’ factor to other so-called crisis issues-the economy, environment and security,” said Bob Fu.“It’s even more disheartening to hear from the Secretary of the leader of the free world that somehow universal human rights or human lives are irrelevant or have nothing to do with the ‘three big items.’ On the contrary, a country disrespecting and disregarding its own citizens’ basic rights will make the U.S. and the world less safe, less prosperous and more polluted.”
The following is the Radio Free Asia report originally issued in Chinese:
During Secretary of State Hillary’s China Visit, Many Christians and Pro-democracy Activists are Placed Under Surveillance of the Authorities
.
February 23, 2009
During U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit to China, many Christians and pro-democracy activists were stalked by people sent by the authorities.They lodged a strong protest against it and indicated that these actions by authorities are violations of people’s freedom of movement endowed by the Constitution.This is a report from Xinyu, special reporter from Radio Free Asia stationed in Hong Kong.U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton completed her visit to China and left Beijing on Sunday. Before she departed, she went to a Sunday service in a Christian church in Haidian district of Beijing,(picture left)a church controlled by the government.A large police force stood ready at the site.On Sunday, this station reported that more than 20 petitioners held banners on Xiushui Street near the U.S. Embassy and shouted slogans of welcoming Hillary.They also tried to distribute some flyers and got into a conflict with the police.Yu Jie, a Christian author from Beijing, told a reporter from this station on Monday that the petitioners were able to go near the church while many Christians and pro-democracy activists had been placed under strict surveillance and were told not to go out at will before Hillary arrived in Beijing.“I’m very angry that many Christians and human rights activists were placed under surveillance and were harassed to various extents just because Hillary went to a Sunday service in a government-sanctioned church. I was one of the victims. In the three days before this, these plain-clothed agents from Beijing Domestic Security Protection Squad not only stayed downstairs from my house, they also came to talk to me and required me to report to them if I wanted to go out in the next few days.”Yu Jie does not agree with Hillary’s attendance of a Sunday service at a government-sanctioned Three-Self Protection Movement (TSPM) church. He said: “From our point of view, the Haidian church is a place controlled by the government. Just like eight democratic political parties controlled by the Communist Party, it is a decoration, a vase and such an establishment does not meet the principles in the Bible which regard Jesus as the supreme being for worship. Yet, the supreme being for worship in the TSPM system is the Communist Party.”Another person is Qi Zhiyong, a Christian disabled during the June 4 Incident [Tiananmen Square student protest in 1989]. He was taken to a suburb of Beijing by the police where he was held for three days. He said:“This is totally absurd.They have been doing this all these years.When Secretary of State Rice came here last time, they also took me away.Whenever a U.S. president or a high-ranking official comes to Beijing, the authorities always get nervous and do not want me to be in Beijing.”Besides Christians whose movements were restricted, many pro-democracy activists were also placed under surveillance or in the custody of the people sent by the authorities before Hillary’s visit to China. Zha Jianguo, one of the founding members of China Democracy Party, told the reporter:“I think the authorities sent people over to stand guard at our place during Hillary’s visit because they were afraid the foreign reporters might interview us. They were also afraid that we might stage a protest or demand that we see Hillary. However, we think what they are afraid of is actually the rights the Chinese citizens deserve to have. They used the police force to restrict the citizens’ rights, which itself is a violation of the citizens’ rights. It also shows the government is weak.”Jiang Qisheng, deputy director of the independent Chinese Pen Center, Zhang Zuhua, a Constitutional scholar of Beijing, and Gao Hongming, member of the China Democracy Party, and others were also under surveillance during Hillary’s visit to China.Before Hillary left Beijing, she met 22 representatives from women related organizations, including Gao Yaojie, a retired doctor from Henan who is concerned about AIDS.Hillary praised Gao Yaojie for her bravery in expressing her opinions and exposing the authorities.

As in the days of Noah...

The U.S. and China's Human Rights Record

CWN.org-This week, the U.S. State Department released a report criticizing China's human rights record.Still, some are skeptical of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton plans for relations with the country.Eight years ago, China promised to improve it's human rights record if Beijing was selected as the host city for the 2008 Olympics. But Karen Stewart, acting U.S. acting assistant secretary of state, says the country hasn't fulfilled that promise."China's human rights record remained poor in 2008 and it worsened in some areas," she said.Among the concerns are torture and extra-judicial killings. Also an issue are limits on free speech and the ability to freely assemble in places like unregistered Christian house churches. Congressmen and Chinese activists agree with the conclusions of the state department human rights report, but still critical of Secretary Clinton.During her recent visit to China she said human rights would take a back seat to issues like global warming and the world financial crisis."That statement of the secretary of state is an outrage," said Rep. Mike Pence. "We are grateful for their engagement of commerce in our country, but there can be no more important issue than the dignity of man."China Aid president Bob Fu says the U.S. must be an advocate for minorities and house church Christians-China's greatest resource for stability and overcoming crises."Perhaps sometimes they seem like small potatoes, yet the small potatoes are often the best seed for the next crop,"he said. The next generation of Chinese who need encouragement see America as their only hope. "When the United States does not aggressively pressure China and defend the rights of all who suffer under Chinese rule," Alim Seytof of the Uyghur Human Rights Project explained, "then the people have no defender left in the world."
By Gary Lane
CBN News Sr. Reporter
As in the days of Noah...