Sep 15 2009

Yemeni girl, 12, dies in painful childbirth

Category: Gender IssuesPolycarp @ 3:59 pm

AMMAN, Jordan (CNN) — A 12-year-old Yemeni girl, who was forced into marriage, died during a painful childbirth that also killed her baby, a children’s rights group said Monday.

Fawziya Ammodi struggled for three days in labor, before dying of severe bleeding at a hospital on Friday, said the Seyaj Organization for the Protection of Children.

“Although the cause of her death was lack of medical care, the real case was the lack of education in Yemen and the fact that child marriages keep happening,” said Seyaj President Ahmed al-Qureshi.

Born into an impoverished family in Hodeidah, Fawziya was forced to drop out of school and married off to a 24-year-old man last year, al-Qureshi said.

Child brides are commonplace in Yemen, especially in the Red Sea Coast where tribal customs hold sway. Hodeidah is the fourth largest city in Yemen and an important port.

More than half of all young Yemeni girls are married off before the age of 18 — many times to older men, some with more than one wife, a study by Sanaa University found.

HT.

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Mar 06 2009

Israel Targets Messianic Jews and Christians in Human Rights Complaint

Category: Islam, Messianic Judaism, Religion and PoliticsPolycarp @ 9:55 am

There are some disturbing aspects of the Israeli government’s version of Freedom of Religion. The link to the full report is here.

The state-owned Israel Broadcast Authority controls the Hebrew-language Israel Television and an Arabic-language channel, as well as Kol Israel (Voice of Israel) radio, which airs news and other programming in Hebrew, Arabic, and other languages. The Second Television and Radio Authority, a public body, supervises the two privately owned commercial television channels and 14 privately owned radio stations.

A cable company, HOT, and one satellite television company carried international networks and programs produced for domestic audiences. In July 2007 HOT dropped the Christian network Daystar TV from its subscriber package citing “editorial and content considerations” following complaints about proselytizing. A petition by Daystar TV to the Supreme Court was pending at year’s end.

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Jan 22 2009

Murder: 1,284 Gazans dead, 4,336 wounded

Category: Other Posts, Religion and PoliticsPolycarp @ 8:48 am

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip – Squatting in the rubble, his briefcase perched atop his knees, the human rights researcher interviewed residents of a house shelled by Israel as he compiled a list of Gazans killed and wounded during Israel’s offensive against Hamas.

Yasser Abdel Ghafar’s work is part of a painstaking endeavor by the Palestinian Center for Human Rights to count the casualties of the 23-day war. The group released a final tally Wednesday, saying 1,284 Gazans were killed and 4,336 wounded, the vast majority civilians.

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Jan 18 2009

Letter from a Birmingham Jail – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr

Category: Religion and PoliticsPolycarp @ 11:59 am

I believe that the man who gave a good fight for the cause of justice should be honored, so in honor Martin Luther King, Jr, Day I thought that I might post one of his most famous works. I grew up in the Deep South where any one celebrating this day was shunned. It was politely called ‘Human Resources Day’ in the Parish where I lived (Louisiana) and impolitely, well, I will not write that here, you understand. I am white and in my early thirties – I cannot pretend to know the paths that Dr. King and others of his generation, and those before him, traveled, but I can do my best to educate my children on where we have come from.

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Jan 10 2009

Ray Boltz has a new song – Have you stopped singing the old ones yet?

Category: Religious NewsPolycarp @ 10:27 am

Ray Boltz is writing a blog – oh the joy – and has posted his latest entry about his newest song, entitled “Don’t Tell Me Who To Love.”

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Dec 15 2008

Eye-for-an-eye in Islamic ruling

Category: Islam, Religious NewsPolycarp @ 9:14 am

TEHRAN – Ameneh Bahrami once enjoyed photography and mountain vistas. Her work for a medical equipment company gave her financial independence. Several men had asked for her hand in marriage, but the hazel-eyed electrical technician had refused them all. “I wanted to get married, but only to the man I really loved,” she said.

Four years ago, a spurned suitor poured a bucket of sulfuric acid over her head, leaving her blind and disfigured.

Late last month, an Iranian court ordered that five drops of the same chemical be placed in each of her attacker’s eyes, acceding to Bahrami’s demand that he be punished according to a principle in Islamic jurisprudence that allows a victim to seek retribution for a crime. The sentence has not yet been carried out.

We note that Justice merely spoken is rarely justice ratified. I would say that if the Court had ruled against a woman in such a fashion, then the sentence would have suffered no delay in being carried out.
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Aug 12 2008

Chinese Activist Still Missing After Detention

Category: Religious NewsPolycarp @ 1:23 pm

Chinese Activist Still Missing After Detention| Christianpost.com.

BEIJING (AP) – A Christian activist who was detained on his way to a church service attended by President Bush on the opening weekend of the Olympics has not returned home, his brother said Monday.

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Aug 11 2008

Beijing Curbs Religious Rights

Category: Religious NewsPolycarp @ 9:47 pm

By Maureen Fan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, August 10, 2008; A12

BEIJING — China describes itself as a religiously tolerant society, one that allows its citizens to worship freely. This week, per Olympic tradition, it is extending that same freedom to athletes in the form of worship rooms in the Olympic Village, each dedicated for the world’s major religions.

Worshipers also have at their disposal dozens of foreign clerics; 10,000 English-Chinese Bibles emblazoned with the Olympics logo; and an electric organ, for Catholics.

But religious freedom does not extend beyond the heavily secured perimeter fence of the Olympic Green.

In this Olympic year, government officials have sharply tightened restrictions on religion, arresting leaders of unregistered “house churches,” stepping up harassment of congregations, denying visas to foreign missionaries and shutting down places of worship, church members and religious activists said.

The crackdown is part of a security campaign that has targeted human rights advocates, domestic dissidents and petitioners — anyone who might interfere with the ruling Communist Party’s efforts to showcase China as a harmonious society in which the government maintains a firm grip on power.

“How can this be called a harmonious society? If it’s harmonious, we’d have a right to stay in Beijing and attend the Olympics,” said Zhang Mingxuan, a house church pastor and activist who was kicked out of the capital by police recently, temporarily detained Sunday and then arrested again by public security police in Henan province Thursday.

Officially, China allows worship only at registered churches belonging to the Three-Self Patriotic Movement, a government-controlled organization of about 25 million members founded in the 1950s to free China from foreign funds and foreign influence. Beijing has about 30 official Protestant and Catholic churches.

But many members of China’s rapidly growing Christian community prefer to worship in unofficial or underground churches where there are no restrictions on teaching children and where leaders are not controlled by the Communist Party. House church membership ranges from 50 million to 100 million nationwide, activists say, with as many as 1,000 unregistered churches in Beijing that include tiny congregations that meet in people’s bedrooms.

President Bush drew attention to house churches this past week by expressing “deep concerns about religious freedom” in China, even while insisting the Olympics should not be politicized.

Bush plans to attend an official Three-Self Church, as he did during his last trip to China. Aides said that he wanted to attend a house church but that Chinese officials would not have allowed it. Some activists, however, have questioned whether Bush was simply concerned about offending the Chinese government. Two U.S. congressmen, Frank R. Wolf (R-Va.) and Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.), briefly visited a house church in June but were followed by state security officials.

Bob Fu, founder of the China Aid Association, a Christian rights organization based in Midland, Tex., met with Bush recently and urged him to attend a house church service. Fu said the religious accommodations at the Olympics were of limited value.

“To open religious services and make some literature available to a limited number of people during the Olympics is a welcome thing, but it means nothing in terms of religious freedom in China,” Fu said.

“It would mean more if Beijing residents are able to access the Bible and other religious literature in a public bookstore, and if Chinese citizens could choose their places of worship without being afraid of harassment, being arrested or sent to labor camps,” added Fu, who said Bush’s appeal to Chinese officials on religious freedom and human rights was mostly for the benefit of his domestic critics.

One of Fu’s recommended destinations for Bush was the Shou Wang house church in western Beijing, where 600 to 700 people attend three services each Sunday. Worshipers ride an elevator to the eighth floor of a commercial office building, take seats in a nondescript room with a piano and a simple brown cross, and begin with a hymn.

“I don’t care if this is a legal church or an illegal one,” said Kong Hong, 27, a guitar player sporting a tattoo and a ponytail who said he had learned about Shou Wang from a friend.

“In China, there are so many things the government doesn’t allow. But that doesn’t mean that everything banned is bad,” Kong said, admiring the choir. “Everyone should ask themselves what they truly believe in. We’re all adults. We have the ability to decide what we believe in, to judge what is right or wrong. People won’t listen just because the government says so.”

In May, representatives from the Office of Nationality, Religion and Overseas Chinese Affairs showed up at Shou Wang, announced that the service was an illegal assembly and took down worshipers’ names, employers and cellphone numbers, a church leader said. Shortly afterward, church members received phone calls from both religious officials and their state-controlled work units ordering them to stop attending the church. Most refused.

“In a way, it’s a kind of progress that we are still able to operate,” said Yuan Ling, one congregant. “It shows that the government is worried about its international image.”

Officials object to unsanctioned proselytizing and are worried about contact between house churches and Western religious leaders. Several Western evangelists and church leaders have been denied visas in the last month or two, activists said. House church members in Beijing say they have been pressured by the government to avoid talking with foreign reporters.

Yu Jie, who became a dissident in 1989 and is a member of a 30-person house church, said the efforts of the crackdown has been limited for large churches.

“For some big house churches in cities like Beijing and Shanghai, the government might not push too hard because they’re afraid of a backlash or creating an influential news story,” Yu said. “But for small house churches, including many in the countryside, the crackdown is very serious.”

Shou Wang has not been the only target. Several Beijing seminaries have been shuttered on the grounds that they were not registered with the Three-Self Church, activists said.

At another large house church called the Gospel Church, officials recently detained and questioned one of its leaders, Gao Zhen. In June, police tried to break up a meeting of the Maizi house church but got the location wrong. That night, worshipers at Maizi split into eight different groups to avoid detection. They now gather in various apartments.

Another church known as City Revival was shut down; one of its leaders was arrested in early May and released in June.

“An important reason for the crackdown is the Olympics. This year, Chinese leaders face more pressure from outside groups, house churches and even ordinary individual citizens,” said Fan Yafeng, a law professor at the Institute of Law at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and a leader of the 80-member Sina house church. “The Public Security Bureau always misuses its power. . . . They have lost their humanity.”

“In the Olympic Village, you can find religious freedom. Maybe some foreigners can worship,” Fan said. “But I tell you, the real crisis in China now is that there are no reformers left. The power struggle among the leadership is for power, not reform. To have real political reform, they would lose their power.”

Religion News (RSS): Beijing Curbs Religious Rights.

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Jul 25 2008

You must be nicer to Muslims, Britain is told by UN human rights chiefs

Category: Islam, Religious NewsPolycarp @ 11:46 pm


Britain was told yesterday by a United Nations committee to take firm action to combat ‘negative public attitudes’ towards Muslims.

The nine-member human rights committee also criticised some of the UK’s antiterror measures.

The body, which is composed of legal experts, said it was concerned ‘ negative public attitudes towards Muslim members of society’ continued to develop in Britain.

The TV rabbit preaching hatred and telling young Muslims to ‘kill and eat Jews’

An Islamic TV station using a Bugs Bunny lookalike to preach hatred to children has been slammed by religious leaders in the UK who fear it could brainwash vulnerable British children.

Assud the rabbit, who vows to ‘kill and eat Jews’ and glorifies the maiming of ‘infidels’ appears on Palestinian children’s show, Tomorrow’s Pioneers.

The rabbit is a number of characters who is punished by viewer’s vote when he breaches Sharia law.

But what about the Muslims?

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Jul 25 2008

Iran Declares ‘Islamic Human Rights Day’

Category: Islam, Religious NewsPolycarp @ 10:21 pm

CNSNews.com – Iran Declares ‘Islamic Human Rights Day’.

Oxymoron…

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