Uzbekistan Christian Could Face Prison

Uzbekistan Christian Could Face Five Years in Prison for Hosting Worship Services:

A small Baptist congregation in Uzbekistan is under fire again from authorities.

The charge is failing to comply with a mandatory registration requirement. The church flock in Khalkabad near Pap in the eastern Namangan Region of Uzbekistan was harassed four years ago for not registering its activities with authorities.

Uzbekistan is in Central Asia, north of Afghanistan.

Local Baptists told Forum 18 News Service that police raided Sunday services on July 29 and August 5. Following the raids, church member Nikolai Zulfikarov – who hosts services in his home – could face criminal trial with a possible sentence of up to five years imprisonment.

Baptists told Forum 18 that an investigation was initiated against Zulfikarov under Article 216 of the Criminal Code, which punishes so-called “illegal organization of a social or religious organization.”

Charges are also reportedly being prepared against others present at the services, as well as Baptists from the city of Fergana who traveled to Pap to try and find out what is going on.

“The authorities wanted to sentence Nikolai Zulfikarov immediately, but after church members complained the process stopped,” one Baptist speaking on condition of anonymity told Forum 18. “There’s now total silence, but it is not clear if this means they will abandon the attempt or if they are moving stealthily behind the scenes.”

According to Forum 18, the head of the Pap District Criminal Investigation Department, Abdumalik Motboev, is leading the investigation into Zulfikarov and four other church members. An official who answered Motboev’s telephone and declined to give his name, confirmed to Forum 18 that a criminal case has been launched against Zulfikarov. However, the official said he did not know the details of the case.

HT: http://www.persecution.org/suffering/

Good News: Korean Hostages

Taliban free eight Korean hostages:

Taliban insurgents freed eight South Korean hostages in two separate batches on Wednesday, the first of 19 Christian volunteers the Taliban agreed to release.

Three South Korean women were released first, and later five — four women and a man — handed over to members of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Ghazni province, Reuters witnesses said.

Wearing long, traditional headscarves, the three women who were first to be freed wept as they sat in an ICRC vehicle.

Taliban representative Qari Mohammad Bashir, who was involved in the negotiations that led to the agreement to free the Koreans, told the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press news agency he hoped all would be free in two or three days.

Like I say, this is good news for the hostages, their families and friends, and the sending organization. Very good news. Extremely good, in fact.

But then there’s this fly in the ointment:

South Korea’s presidential Blue House said the agreement was on condition it withdraw its troops from Afghanistan within the year and stopped its nationals doing missionary work in Afghanistan.

However, South Korea had already decided before the crisis to withdraw its contingent of about 200 engineers and medical staff from Afghanistan by the end of 2007. Since the hostages were taken it has banned its nationals from traveling there.

A spokesman for South Korea’s president, Chon Ho-seon, did not respond to questions at a news briefing in Seoul on Wednesday on whether a ransom was part of the deal but said South Korea had done what was needed.

“We believe it is any country’s responsibility to respond with flexibility to save lives as long as you don’t depart too far from the principles and practice of the international community,” Chon said.

Then again, maybe that’s a pterosaur instead of a fly.

In which case, it’s bad news for Future Hostages-To-Be Who Are Not Yet Hostages.

But what do I know? It’s all theoretic to me. I’ve never been a hostage. Nor the relative or friend of a hostage. Nor have I been responsible for a hostage.

Update 1: Wednesday 29 August @ 11:11 Pacific

Three More!

A third batch comprising three women and a man were released later on Wednesday, they said.

[…]

A Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousuf, said by telephone he expected all of the hostages to be free by Thursday.

Cumming vs the Gospel?

Perhaps.

But I doubt it.

Here’s WorldNetDaily’s intro to the story:

Giving out Gospel tracts becomes a federal case

A federal civil rights lawsuit has been filed on behalf of a 67-year-old Georgia man who was arrested, held in jail for two days and convicted without being given access to a lawyer for passing out Gospel tracts on a public street.

Jesus didn’t get access to a lawyer either. What would He do if He were in this man’s shoes? (Then again, it could easily be argued that He indeed is in this man’s shoes!)

Maybe this man could settle for an apology from the city fathers, the way the Apostle Paul did once upon a time.

Or maybe he could consider it suffering for righteousness’ sake and let it go at that.

But to make a federal case of it?

Frankly, though, I find it hard to let some things go in my own instances of I-Want-Justice-Done-For-Me. What I have written is a poke in my own heart.

Never Mind the Amish?

I read this over at WizBangBlog: Papers Pull Opus Comic Strip To Avoid Offending Muslims:

Berkely Breathed, the comic genius behind Bloom County and now Opus has notified readers of his Sunday comic that newspapers around the country (including The Washington Post) are pulling his next two strips.

Check out one of the strips here.

This wasn’t pulled to avoid offending the Amish??!!??

Well, perhaps there will yet be a newspaper or two that will rise to the occasion.

(Is that last word spelled correctly?)

Mother Teresa: Behind Her Smile

Time is reporting about Mother Teresa’s Crisis of Faith:

Mother Teresa: Come Be My LightA new, innocuously titled book, Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light (Doubleday), consisting primarily of correspondence between Teresa and her confessors and superiors over a period of 66 years, provides the spiritual counterpoint to a life known mostly through its works. The letters, many of them preserved against her wishes (she had requested that they be destroyed but was overruled by her church), reveal that for the last nearly half-century of her life she felt no presence of God whatsoever — or, as the book’s compiler and editor, the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk, writes, “neither in her heart or in the eucharist.”

That absence seems to have started at almost precisely the time she began tending the poor and dying in Calcutta, and — except for a five-week break in 1959 — never abated. Although perpetually cheery in public, the Teresa of the letters lived in a state of deep and abiding spiritual pain. In more than 40 communications, many of which have never before been published, she bemoans the “dryness,” “darkness,” “loneliness” and “torture” she is undergoing. She compares the experience to hell and at one point says it has driven her to doubt the existence of heaven and even of God. She is acutely aware of the discrepancy between her inner state and her public demeanor. “The smile,” she writes, is “a mask” or “a cloak that covers everything.”

The poor woman.

I wonder what she learned after she died.

By the way, her name at birth (in what is now Macedonia) was Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu. According to Wikipedia, “She took her first vows as a nun on 24 May 1931. At that time she chose the name Teresa after the patron saint of missionaries.”

Taliban’s Christian Hostages

Christian hostages of the Taliban

Taliban threatens to kill 23 Korean hostages:

Taliban fighters threatened to execute 23 South Korean Christians held captive in southern Afghanistan yesterday, as United States and Afghan forces prepared for a possible rescue operation.

Afghan officials said that troops had sealed off an area of the southern province of Ghazni, where they believe the hostages are being held. The Koreans were seized from a bus on the main Kabul to Kandahar highway last Thursday in the largest single abduction of foreigners since 2001.

Original post time: July 23, 2007 @ 08:04

Update: Late Tuesday morning (24 July, Pacific Time):

The Taliban said talks over the fate of 23 South Korean hostages held in Afghanistan were at a crucial point Tuesday after the latest deadline for their lives passed.

The Islamic militants gave a list of eight jailed rebels to the government whom it wants released, and said it would free the same number of the Korean Christian aid workers in exchange.

Update 2: Wednesday, July 25 — 07:45 Pacific

Taliban say kill Korean hostage, set new deadline:

Taliban kidnappers killed one of its 23 South Koreans hostages and will kill the rest if their demands are not met by 2030 GMT (4.30 pm ET) on Wednesday, a Taliban spokesman said.

The Taliban had complained the Afghan government had failed to release any Taliban prisoners as the kidnappers had demanded and as, according to the rebel spokesman, Korean negotiators had assured them Kabul would do.

Update 3: Sunday 29 July at 07:46 Pacific

Another deadline

Taliban leaders said on Sunday their fighters would kill 22 remaining South Korean hostages if the Afghan government did not release rebel prisoners by a new deadline of 0730 GMT on Monday, a spokesman said.

Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousuf said the deadline had been set by the Taliban leadership council, headed by elusive leader Mullah Mohammad Omar, giving the threat added weight.

The kidnappers killed the leader of the Korean group on Wednesday, but several further deadlines have passed without the rebels carrying out their threat to kill the remaining hostages.

Korean hostages get another deadline
some family members

Update 4: Monday 30 July @ 4:27 pm Pacific

I just saw this story (which is two or three hours old by now):

Taliban kidnappers shot dead a male South Korean hostage on Monday, a spokesman for the group said, accusing the Afghan government of not listening to rebel demands for the release of Taliban prisoners.

Update 5: Saturday 11 August @ 7:40 am Pacific

Taliban ‘optimistic’ as SKorean hostage talks end:

A Taliban negotiator Saturday said 21 South Korean hostages could be freed as early as “today or tomorrow” but only if the Afghan government accepted its demand to free militant prisoners.

The offer came as spokesman for the kidnappers said they were optimistic about talks aimed at releasing the group of Christian aid workers captured on the main highway between Kabul and Kandahar more than three weeks ago.

Kabul has steadfastly rejected previous offers of a prisoner swap with the Al-Qaeda-backed insurgents and its position was reiterated by President Hamid Karzai’s office Saturday.

If the kidnappers and murderers are optimistic, how should the captives and their families and friends be?


Someone else you can pray for

Taliban representative Qari Bashir (L) addresses the media as Mullah Nasrullah looks on.

Two others for whom you may pray!

Update 6: Monday 13 August @ 7:13 am Pacific

Good News: Taliban frees two South Korean women hostages

Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan freed two South Korean women hostages on Monday, officials in Seoul said, and they have been handed over to the Red Crescent.

Reuters witnesses said the two women arrived in the village of Arzoo, near the city of Ghazni, in a saloon car driven by two tribal elders.

“We saw them getting into a Red Crescent vehicle,” one of the witnesses said. “They were able to walk and appeared to be well, but they were very emotional and were crying.”

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry confirmed that two Korean women were freed.

A Taliban spokesman said the decision to free the pair had been made by the Taliban leadership council, headed by Mullah Mohammad Omar, as a gesture of goodwill towards the Korean people and South Korean diplomats negotiating for the hostages’ release.

The pair are the first of the hostages to be released by the Taliban kidnappers since the group of 23 Korean church volunteers were abducted from a bus in Ghazni province on the main road south from the capital Kabul more than three weeks ago.

A gesture of good will necesitated by their own initial actions of ill will towards the Korean people.

Update 7:Monday 20 August at 12:31 pm Pacific

Press TV is reporting:

Taliban have signaled growing impatience with South Korean officials as sources close to the talks said they have turned down a cash ransom.

The kidnappers accused Korean hostage negotiators of not doing enough to persuade the Afghan government to accept their demands to release Taliban prisoners.

“The Korean nation must understand that if their hostages are harmed their government will be responsible, because it doesn’t do much to gain their release,” a purported Taliban statement said.

“Their efforts are not sufficient,” according to the statement, read over the telephone to AFP by a Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahed.

[…]

“Our negotiating team were in telephone contact with the South Korean delegation today (Monday). The Koreans are asking for more time,” he said.

“The Koreans are telling us that ‘we’re trying to persuade the Kabul administration and the US government to accept the Taliban demands’ — but it seems they can’t,” he added.

Update 8:Tuesday 21 August at 11:22 am (Pacific)

In Qatar, The Gulf Times is reporting this morning:

Three South Koreans held in Afghanistan by Taliban militants have gone on hunger strike to demand that all 19 remaining hostages be held together rather than in separate groups, South Korean state news agency Yonhap reported yesterday.

Citing an informed source speaking on condition of anonymity, Yonhap said one male and two female hostages went on hunger strike from Sunday morning.

The hostages are reported to have been split into as many as five groups and are being detained at different locations in Ghazni province in central Afghanistan, where they were taken hostage on July 19.

As much as I may sympathize with and ache for (and pray for???) the hostages, I think this act of desperation is misguided. After all, they’re dealing with the Taliban.

Martial Law and Clergy

KSLA News 12 reports:

Could martial law ever become a reality in America? Some fear any nuclear, biological or chemical attack on U.S. soil might trigger just that. KSLA News 12 has discovered that the clergy would help the government with potentially their biggest problem: Us.

[…]

If martial law were enacted here at home, like depicted in the movie “The Siege”, easing public fears and quelling dissent would be critical. And that’s exactly what the ‘Clergy Response Team’ helped accomplish in the wake of Katrina.

[…]

For the clergy team, one of the biggest tools that they will have in helping calm the public down or to obey the law is the bible itself, specifically Romans 13. Dr. Tuberville elaborated, “because the government’s established by the Lord, you know. And, that’s what we believe in the Christian faith. That’s what’s stated in the scripture.”

Romans 13:1,2 is definitely applicable to Christians:

Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God.

Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation.

So unless the government requires you to do something contrary to God’s Word and ways, submit.

That said, I think Christian ministers working hand-in-glove with the State like that is contrary to the Scriptures.

Above all, love God!
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