Saturday, December 23, 2006

Christian teen recovering from attack by Islamists

Christian teen recovering from attack by Islamists
Voice of Martyrs helping with medical, emotional cataclysm
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© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

In many ways Noviana Malewa is like any other teen-aged Christian girl in Indonesia. But it is her eyes – which reveal a sadness and strength far beyond her years – that are different, and give evidence of the emotional and mental trauma of her own experience with radical Islam, a new report concludes.

That, and the machete chop scar that runs from her cheek bone across her face down onto her neck, says the report from Voice of the Martyrs.

As WND has reported, Noviana and three of her friends were walking on a school path Oct 29, 2005, when they were assaulted by radical Islamic jihadists wielding machetes. Noviana was the only survivor, and suffered the massive slash across her face and neck; the other three girls were decapitated.

VOMedical, a division of the outreach to persecuted Christians worldwide that deals with medical issues, eventually was able to arrange transportation for Noviana to a hospital in Surabaya, and officials are planning to continue follow-up physical treatment.

"Though Noviana's physical scars are beginning to heal, she still struggles with the emotional and mental scars from witnessing the brutal murder of her three friends. Yet, she remains steadfast in her faith," the group confirmed in its report.

Noviana and her friends had been taking a small footpath on their way to their Christian high school in Poso, Indonesia, when radical Islamists dressed all in black jumped suddenly from the jungle and began slashing the girls with machetes.

VOM reports that Noviana fought back as she was struck, then fell to the ground and rolled down into a ravine. Above, she heard her friends screaming.

Just as she was about to lose hope, a van of soldiers appeared and the attackers fled. The soldiers then took her to a hospital.

But she had to be hidden in a Christian village and guarded by police because her testimony was needed in court, and the radical Muslims who had killed her friends still were hunting her. At that point it was too dangerous even to leave her in a hospital, but after months of negotiations to guarantee her safety, arrangements were made for her to be in the Surabaya hospital, VOM said.

She's had successful surgery and VOM is working on continuing care, officials said. She suffered from an involuntary tick in her eye and another near her mouth because of the nerve damage from the slash, and she also suffered other nerve damage and a dislocated jaw.

Earlier reports said daily massages are being used to stimulate nerve repair and skin salves must be given daily. Plastic surgery also was obtained to reduce the scarring.

Authorities said Theresia Morangke, 15, Yarni Sambue, 15, and Alfita Poliwo, 17, were killed in the attack. Their heads were found in bags on the steps of a church and along a road, carrying a message, "We will murder 100 more Christian teenagers and their heads will be presented as presents."

The Pakistan Christian Post reported that Noviana recalled streaming with blood.

"All I could do was pray to Jesus for his help,' she said.

According to a subsequent report in The Jakarta Post, the Islamic suspects in the deaths have confessed to the fatal attack. Authorities reported that the suspects have ties to Noordin Top, who is considered a key leader of the Al-Qaida-linked group Jamaah Islamiyah.

There also have been reports that the defendants told authorities they planned the murders as a "gift" to mark the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

VOM is a non-profit, interdenominational ministry working worldwide to help Christians who are persecuted for their faith, and to educate the world about that persecution. Its headquarters are in Bartlesville, Okla., and it has 30 affiliated international offices.

It was launched by the late Richard and Sabina Wurmbrand, who started smuggling Russian Gospels into Russia in 1947, just months before Richard was abducted and imprisoned in Romania where he was tortured for his refusal to recant Christianity.

He eventually was released in 1964 and the next year he testified about the persecution of Christians before the U.S. Senate's Internal Security Subcommittee, stripping to the waist to show the deep torture wound scars on his body.

The group that later was renamed The Voice of the Martyrs was organized in 1967, when his book, "Tortured for Christ," was released.

Stewardess 'banned from taking bible on plane'

Stewardess 'banned from taking bible on plane'
By Laura Clout

An air stewardess is claiming religious discrimination against an airline which she says banned her from taking the Bible to Saudi Arabia.

The stewardess has been told by BMI that it is against the law of the insular Middle Eastern country to bring in religious books other than the Koran.

The woman, who is understood to be a committed Christian, takes her bible everywhere she goes and is now set to take the airline to an industrial tribunal claiming discrimination on religious grounds.

BMI, formerly British Midland Airways, said today it was merely following the Foreign Office advice that no non-Islamic materials or artefacts are allowed into the country.

A spokesman from the airline said: "We issue advice to all our staff and passengers that these are the guidelines.

"She is saying she wants to carry her bible with her. We are saying we can't start designing rules around individuals when we've got several hundred members of staff. To take every personal preference into account would be impossible."

On its web site the Foreign Office says of Saudi Arabia: "The importation and use of narcotics, alcohol, pork products and religious books, apart from the Koran, and artefacts are forbidden."

BMI said it offered the stewardess the opportunity to transfer from long-haul duties to short-haul, but she refused.

The case follows that of British Airways worker Nadia Eweida, also committed Christian, whose objection to BA rules which forbade her visibly wearing a cross led to a review by BA of its uniform policy.

© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2006.

Pro-Life Student Sues Virginia School for Prohibiting Abortion Fliers

by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor

Harrisonburg, VA (LifeNews.com) -- A pro-life student prevented from distributing pro-life literature during a national pro-life day for students has filed a lawsuit against the Virginia school that limited his free speech rights. Andrew Raker was censored for distributing pro-life leaflets on campus during the Pro-Life Day of Silent Solidarity.

On October 24, Raker wore a pro-life T-shirt and distributed postcard-size fliers in support of the pro-life day where students take a vow of silence to "speak up" for unborn children killed in abortions.

The following day, he was pulled from class by Millbrook High School’s principal and told that his literature distribution would no longer be permitted because other students might object or consider the materials to be religious in nature.

The principal also threatened to make him remove his pro-life T-shirt and spoke against his desire to start a pro-life group on campus.

Raker has previously distributed literature for years without any disruption or complaints.

Attorneys with the Alliance Defense Fund, a pro-life law firm, filed a complaint and motion for preliminary injunction today against officials of the Frederick County Public Schools on Raker's behalf.

“The free speech rights of Christian and pro-life students do not end at the schoolhouse gate,” said ADF Legal Counsel Matt Bowman.

“Students are capable of freely handing a leaflet to their classmates in a non-disruptive manner. Much ignorance exists about what the Constitution really says about this," Bowman added. "Millbrook’s policy is hostile toward our client’s viewpoint against abortion, and it cannot be allowed to continue.”

After the incident, Raker received a letter from school official J. Richard Plaugher informing him of a policy which had not been circulated to students or parents that requires pre-approval of literature distribution before and after school and bans literature distribution even at lunch time.

The policy contains no standards governing the approval process.

“The First Amendment prevents officials from chilling constitutional speech on campus,” Bowman said.

"Regardless of whether school officials agree with Mr. Raker’s views, they cannot abolish his and other students’ First Amendment rights when they step onto campus," he concluded.

ADF attorneys filed their complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia in Raker v. Frederick County Public Schools. A hearing on the preliminary injunction motion is scheduled for Jan. 12 at 10 a.m. EST in Harrisonburg before Judge Samuel G. Wilson.

Copyright © 2003-2006 LifeNews.com. All rights reserved.

Exodus from Bethlehem, it's no longer a Christian town, who is really to blame?

Exodus from Bethlehem, it's no longer a Christian town, who is really to blame?
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Posted: December 23, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

On one thing we can all agree this Christmas: Bethlehem is no longer a Christian town.

But why?

If you believe the New York Times or former President Jimmy Carter, the Israelis are to blame. Those nasty Jews built a security fence around the town, apparently with the specific purpose of persecuting Christians, who have fled the town in droves.

Here's what Carter had to say in calling the security fence a crime against Christianity: "[It] ravages many places along its devious route that are important to Christians. … In addition to enclosing Bethlehem in one of its most notable intrusions, an especially heartbreaking division is on the southern slope of the Mount of Olives, a favorite place for Jesus and his disciples."

Tracing this particular myth of the Middle East is easier than many others. It first gained urban legend status two years ago when the New York Times blamed Israel's security fence for the dwindling Christian population in formerly Christian towns like Bethlehem.

While Snopes did nothing to bust this hoax, I did my best when I first read the story by Greg Myre. It began:

In the town where Christians believe Christ was born, the Christians are leaving. Four years of violence, an economic free fall and the Israeli separation barrier have all contributed to the hardships facing Palestinian Christians in Bethlehem, one of the largest concentrations of Christians in the region.
There you have it. Why are the Christians leaving Bethlehem? At least partly, according to the New York Times, because of the Israeli security fence. And, of course, the New York Times is Jimmy Carter's gospel.

But, as I pointed out then, the claim defies common sense. Just ask yourself a question: Why would the security fence disproportionately affect Christians? If the security fence were contributing to the exodus, it should be causing an exodus of Muslims as well, right?

Last year, perhaps taking their cue from the New York Times, the story was recycled in a thousand other news venues. Political leaders around the world took up the lie as their own. And, of course, Arab and Muslim leaders were only too happy to begin championing the cause of these poor, misplaced, mistreated Christians.

There's just one problem. It's a total, bald-faced lie.

Here is the truth. Bethlehem, once a 90 percent Christian town, now claims only 12 percent of its population of 60,000 Arab residents as Christians. The number drops day by day, month by month, year by year. Last year, for comparison purposes, the town was 35 percent Christian.

They haven't left for no good reason. They have left for very good reasons. In fact, knowing the conditions these Christians face today, it's surprising there are still some around. But the exodus of Christians has nothing to do with the Israeli security fence.

Six years ago, when the latest exodus began, the Israelis had not even started construction of the security fence.

Up until 1948, Bethlehem was more than 90 percent Christian. The Arab-Israeli war of 1948, begun by Arab states in response to the founding of Israel, brought an influx of Muslim refugees to the Bethlehem area and signaled the start of a demographic shift. Then six years ago, the exodus of Christians became a flood.

Buried in the New York Times story of two years ago was a key paragraph that explained why:

In the early days of the uprising, Muslim gunmen in the Bethlehem area took hilltop positions in Beit Jala, which is predominantly Christian. That afforded them a clear firing line at the southernmost part of Jerusalem. When the Israeli military responded, Beit Jala residents found themselves on the front lines of the conflict, and occasionally among its casualties.
In other words, Muslim terrorists have intentionally placed Christians in the crossfire between them and Israel. They did that when they seized the Church of the Nativity, nearly destroying it, defecating in the hallways, smashing statues and stealing precious objects. The Israelis, for their part, negotiated an end to the standoff rather than destroy the church that represents so much to the Christian world.

If the Israelis contributed in any way to the exodus of Christians, it was by withdrawing from Bethlehem and the so-called "Palestinian territories" in the West Bank. Since they left, the Palestinian Authority has waged a jihad against the Christian community, raping women, extorting businessmen, lynching "collaborators" and seizing homes.

That's why the Christians have left and continue to leave. They enjoyed life while their towns were under the control of Israel. Once they were turned over to the terrorists, there wasn't much left to keep them in the areas in which their families lived for generations.

It took WND Jerusalem bureau chief Aaron Klein to set the record straight last year.

"All this talk about Israel driving Christians out and causing pain is nonsense," a Bethlehem Christian community leader told WND. "You want to know what is at play here, just come throughout the year and see the intimidation from the Muslims. They have burned down our stores, built mosques in front of our churches, stole our real estate and took away our rights. Women have been raped and abducted. So don't tell me about Israel. It's the Muslims."

Christmas war erupts in unlikely place

Christmas war erupts in unlikely place
By SHERRI DAY

TAMPA - They wanted to make Christmas bright for patients at St. Joseph's Children's Hospital.

But, quite by accident, a group of parents, teachers and sisters from the Villa Madonna Catholic School stepped into the Christmas wars. Improbably, their opponent was St. Joseph's Children's Hospital, which has its roots in the Catholic Church.

At issue: whether the group could distribute religious-themed gifts to patients. During a Dec. 11 visit, the hospital staff assessed the group's offerings and quickly made a decision. Ornaments that read "Joy to the World" and "Peace on Earth" were in. Nativity lapel pins, ornaments bearing a "Merry Christmas" message and Jesus-themed T-shirts were out. They could only be given to patients with parental consent.

"Yes, we were founded by Catholic sisters, but we serve everybody in our community," said Sister Pat Shirley, a Franciscan sister and the hospital's vice president of missions. "We have to create an environment in which all feel comfortable whether it be Christmas or Hanukkah or Gasparilla or any circumstance."

The hospital, Sister Shirley said, has patients from varied religious backgrounds and carefully scrutinizes gifts, particularly those of a religious nature. Other bay area hospitals forbid donating religious items.

Sister Kim Keraitis, the school's principal and a member of the Salesian Sisters of St. John Bosco, found the hospital's political correctness appalling.

"It's not Tampa General," Sister Keraitis said. "It's not Wal-Mart. It's a Catholic hospital, so if you want to distribute items that say 'Merry Christmas' even if there are people there that are of other faiths, it's kind of understood that it's a Catholic hospital."

The group's visit was the second year they went to cheer patients at Christmas. This year, 18 supporters planned to sing songs about jingling bells and red-nosed reindeers. One couple would dress up as Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus and distribute glow-in-the-dark necklaces and bracelets to brighten children's nights.

But the glow jewelry, apparently, was held up at the North Pole.

So Sister Keraitis proffered ornaments, nativity pins and red T-shirts emblazoned with the slogan "Jesus is the heart of Christmas ... Villa Madonna wishes you a Merry Christmas."

"What is Santa Claus with an empty sack when you go into a Children's Hospital?" said Kimmie Martinez, a Villa Madonna teacher and parent who dressed up as Mrs. Claus. "The sister saved us."

Thus began the group's unexpected entry into a culture war. Last year, Christian advocacy groups around the nation waged a campaign against retailers who jettisoned "Merry Christmas" for the more secular "Happy Holidays." Bowing to pressure, some businesses, including Wal-Mart, again embraced Christmas this year, muting controversy.

As the group made its way through the hospital last week singing Jingle Bells and We Wish You a Merry Christmas, parents eagerly allowed their children to accept the gifts, Martinez said.

When parents were not present, the volunteers asked patients if they said 'Merry Christmas' or believed in Jesus. If they answered yes to either one, they got the gifts, Sister Keraitis said.

"I don't want to cause a big stir, but my concern was the fact that it's a Catholic institution," Sister Keraitis said. "Within the Catholic institution, we shouldn't have to apologize for saying 'Merry Christmas' to people."

The hospital is part of the St. Joseph's-Baptist Health Care System, and part of a collection of 10 private nonprofit hospitals in Pinellas and Hillsborough.

Martinez was not put off. It pales compared to bringing joy to children in distress, and if the hospital allows her, she hopes to return. Next year, however, she'll make sure she has her glow-in-the-dark necklaces.

"I just want to be welcomed back because we all enjoy it," she said.

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times

Al Qaeda Sends a Message to Democrats

Al Qaeda Sends a Message to Democrats
December 22, 2006 2:28 PM

Brian Ross and Hoda Osman Report:

Al Qaeda has sent a message to leaders of the Democratic party that credit for the defeat of congressional Republicans belongs to the terrorists.

In a portion of the tape from al Qaeda No. 2 man, Ayman al Zawahri, made available only today, Zawahri says he has two messages for American Democrats.

"The first is that you aren't the ones who won the midterm elections, nor are the Republicans the ones who lost. Rather, the Mujahideen -- the Muslim Ummah's vanguard in Afghanistan and Iraq -- are the ones who won, and the American forces and their Crusader allies are the ones who lost," Zawahri said, according to a full transcript obtained by ABC News.

Zawahri calls on the Democrats to negotiate with him and Osama bin Laden, not others in the Islamic world who Zawahri says cannot help.

"And if you don't refrain from the foolish American policy of backing Israel, occupying the lands of Islam and stealing the treasures of the Muslims, then await the same fate," he said.

Copyright © 2006 ABCNews Iternet Ventures

Kansas abortionist charged, but judge dismisses counts

Kansas abortionist charged, but judge dismisses counts

State puts together criminal case against George Tiller, district attorney intervenes saying she won't prosecute
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Posted: December 22, 2006
5:00 p.m. Eastern

By Bob Unruh
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

The state of Kansas assembled evidence supporting 30 criminal counts filed against Wichita abortionist George Tiller, but the local district attorney intervened to have the charges dismissed, claiming she doesn't support prosecution of the case.

The complaint was drawn up by outgoing Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline and named George Tiller, noting he is accused of providing abortions to females ranging from 10-22 years of age, whose unborn babies were aged 25 to 31 weeks.

In Kansas, it is against the law to do an abortion on a baby older than 22 weeks, unless special medical conditions are met. The charges explain those conditions simply didn't exist.

However, it took only hours for the the prosecutor in the 18th district, Nola Tedesco Foulston, to object and request that a judge dismiss the counts, which he did immediately.

"This District Attorney has not invited or requested, consented or acquiesced, or failed to object to the filing of the Complaint. The District Attorney does in fact object to any such filing by the Attorney General as he lacks the legal authority to file such complaint in this jurisdiction," Foulston wrote.

The dismissal was signed by Judge Paul Clark.

However, officials with Kline's office said he disagreed with the procedural dismissal, and was preparing an "Emergency Motion to Reconsider" to be filed in Sedgwick County District Court.

Officials with Operation Rescue were horrified to see the developments:

"Foulston has come under criticism by pro-life supporters for refusing to prosecute accusations against Tiller because of her personal friendship with him. It is alleged that she adopted her only son through Tiller, who has stated publicly that he has arranged adoptions in return for political favors," a statement on the Operation Rescue website said.

"This is a classic example of why justice cannot be done in this state because so many officials have ties to George Tiller," said OR President Troy Newman. "Money buys a lot of favors here. This miscarriage of justice must not be allowed to stand. "

Officials noted the case was dismissed "without prejudice," which means that until the statute of limitations expires on the allegations, they could be refiled.

Two lawyers representing Tiller held a news conference to confirm the charges, describing them as "technical" violations of Kansas reporting laws.

Tiller had been scheduled to appear in Sedgwick County District Court Wednesday on the charges from cases in which abortion industry forces had battled through the state Supreme Court in unsuccessful efforts to prevent Kline of obtaining the medical records.

Tiller attorney Lee Thompson would not confirm the number of counts, answering only that the case involved a "number of misdemeanors involving a number of patients."

Thompson indicated a summons had been issued to Tiller by a copy being placed in Tiller's door overnight, and he said he had a copy of the complaint, but wouldn't share details.

Newman said pro-life groups had been working to seek the counts filed for years. "We have repeatedly reported on our website and through press releases that we believed that Tiller was breaking the law, injuring women and killing innocent late-term babies that should have had the protection of the law."

He also called on the state Board of Healing Arts "to suspend Tiller's license and close his abortion clinic to insure that further crimes are not committed. We won't rest until Tiller is convicted and behind bars and his abortion mill is permanently closed."

Kline had said the females involved are not under investigation, will not be charged and, in fact, haven't even been identified.

"The complaint speaks for itself, the identity of the patients will not be sought or revealed by my office. These are accusations and Mr. Tiller is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. The investigation is ongoing," Kline said in a prepared statement.

A spokesman in his office said he would not be available for further comment.

Tiller's lawyers said there was no evidence of crimes and promised to hold Kline "personally responsible" for the prosecution.

The Kline summary of the case, however, noted the law restricts post viability abortion "unless two doctors find either: a) the mother's life is in jeopardy if the abortion is not performed; or b) 'a continuation of the pregnancy will cause a substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman…'"

Those are the requirements that were not met, the complaint alleged.

"Violating any of the provisions of this act is a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail, a $2,500 fine or both," the summary said.

"Although the late-term abortion statute states that 'upon a second or subsequent offense' for violation of this statute that the person 'is guilty of a severity level 10, non-person felony,' Kansas Supreme Court case law has interpreted such provisions to require a previous conviction before (someone) can be charged with a felony," the summary said.

Kline said Kansas law also provides for revocation of a person's medical license for performing a criminal late-term abortion.

Kline's summary said in nine of the cases, the pregnant "woman or child" was diagnosed as having "Major Depressive Disorder, Single Episode," and in four more cases the "pregnant woman or child" was diagnosed with "Acute Stress Disorder."

"In three cases, it is alleged that the clinic reported to KDHE that the fetus was not viable when the defendant's medical records indicate that the fetus was viable," the summary continued.

There might have been other charges, too, but the statute of limitations had expired on some of the case being reviewed, Kline's summary said.

The subpoenas for the records were issued in September 2004, but the documents were provided to Kline's investigators only on Oct. 24, 2006, more than two years later.

"By the time the investigators for the Attorney General's office obtained the files …. 28 of the files subpoenaed by the Court in September 2004 relating to this defendant had expired…," the summary said.

Kline has been investigating whether Tiller and other abortionists were violating the state's abortion laws nearly since he took office, because Kansas law prohibits abortions after the 22nd week of pregnancy unless special conditions are met.

Kline will be replaced in three weeks by Democrat Paul Morrison, who during his election cited no need for investigating the abortionists. However, a spokeswoman reported that he'd made no decision about whether this specific case will be continued.

Operation Rescue officials said Kline's investigation of abortion clinics for "the concealment of child rape and illegal late-term abortions" was the key to Kline's defeat in a state with a governor and industry strongly supportive of abortion.

"Kansas has opted to continue the practice of looking the other way when innocent young girls are taken to abortion clinics by their rapists, who are looking to destroy the evidence of their crimes," said Newman after the election. "It has also voted to ignore violations of Kansas law that bans post viability abortions."

Kline also had raised the issue of state statistics from 2003, when there were 78 abortions on girls under the age of 15. In a state where the legal age of consent is 16, how could 78 girls become pregnant and obtain abortions without a single report of sexual assault, or rape, on a child, he wondered.

Kline earlier had confirmed, in an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly, that the medical records indicate late-term abortions that were done for reasons that Kansas law doesn't allow.

Morrison had said during his campaign he would start a domestic violence unit, without any additional expense to the state. "Some of the money that's been used on misplaced priorities could easily fund" the plans, he had told the Lawrence Journal-World.

He cited Kline's investigation of the abortion businesses run by George Tiller in Wichita and Planned Parenthood as an example.

Morrison also got a huge boost in his campaign when a non-profit organization that the newspaper linked to Tiller mailed hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of mailings critical of Kline.

The mailings called Kline "Snoop Dog" and were mailed by Kansans for Consumer Privacy Protection, said the newspaper, which noted that group had the same office address as ProKanDo, a political action committee Tiller started and is funding to elect pro-abortion candidates.

The abortion clinics had fought releasing the medical records, and held a news conference to advise women the attorney general was seeking information about them. However, Kline never sought the women's identities, only the medical records of the procedures.

A district court judge had agreed with Kline, noting he couldn't realistically be expected to investigate allegations of crime without access to the records that could prove it.

Two Young Christian Women, Minor Tortured in India

Two Young Christian Women, Minor Tortured in India
Hindu extremists break into their home and beat them for refusing to ‘reconvert.’

NEW DELHI, December 22 (Compass Direct News) – A group of Hindu extremists in the southern state of Karnataka have tortured two young women and a girl who converted to Christianity in an attempt to “reconvert” them to Hinduism.

The incident took place in Guruparahalli area, 12 kilometers (8 miles) from Bangalore, the capital of Karnataka, on December 14. A man identified only as Ramesh broke into the house of three sisters – Jyothi, 20 ; Nandhini, 18 ; and Jalaja, 16. He pressured them to reconvert and beat them for refusing.

The victims, who work in a garment factory, attend the Assembly of God church. Ramesh, who used to live nearby until three months ago, had been opposing the sisters since they converted to Christianity from Hinduism a few months ago.

“The extremists intruded into the house of the women in the evening and got violent upon finding a Bible and other Christian literature on a table,” Dr. Sajan K. George, national president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC), told Compass.

The intruders told the sisters that they would give them whatever they could ask for, and that Jesus would do nothing for them. The sisters did not react. This made the extremists more furious, and they threw the Bible and Christian literature on the floor and stamped on them.

“The fanatics also replaced a Christian calendar with that of Sai Baba, a Hindu god,” George said. “They pressured the women to worship the picture of Sai Baba and apply vermillion on their forehead as a sign of their conversion to Hinduism.”

When the sisters refused to do so, the extremists beat them. “They pulled the youngest sister’s hair, dragged her and banged her against the wall,” he said. “They beat the other two sisters also very brutally. One of them fainted, as she is an asthmatic patient.”

Sadly, he added, the parents did not come to rescue their daughters. “The fanatics continued to beat and torture the sisters for over four hours and left the place only at 2 a.m.,” George said.

The sisters’ father is allegedly an alcoholic and lives on the income of his daughters.

Fearing further tensions, the three sisters took a taxi and left for their uncle’s place in Bangalore at about 4 a.m. Upon learning about the persecution, the victim’s uncle, identified only as Natesh, lodged a police complaint.

The police arrested Ramesh, who was released on bail on December 20. The police are investigating the case.

George said the December 14 break-in was the third time Hindu extremists had barged into the sisters’ house. Ramesh and others first broke into their house on December 13 to warn them against attending church and reading Christian literature.

When they returned on the morning of December 14, they found Nandhini reading the Bible, which infuriated them. They warned the sisters again and promised to come back in the evening, when they attacked them.

Separately, in Revadihal village on the outskirts of Bangalore, local residents on Tuesday (December 19) pelted stones at a group of Christian missionaries and accused them of converting Hindus.

According to Indo-Asian News Service (IANS), no one was injured as the missionaries took shelter in a van they were traveling in and managed to flee from the village.

Tension prevailed in the village after the incident, but the situation was soon brought under control, said IANS.

The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World Hindu Council) demanded that the government initiate steps to check conversions.


© Compass Direct

US 'Nazi guard' faces deportation

US 'Nazi guard' faces deportation

An 85-year-old man accused of having been a guard at a Nazi death camp has lost an appeal against his deportation from the US to his native Ukraine.
John Demjanjuk, who was ordered to be deported a year ago, can still make a further appeal against this ruling.

He has denied the allegations and his lawyers argued he would be tortured if sent back to Ukraine.

Mr Demjanjuk migrated to the US in 1951 and was briefly deported to Israel amid a 30-year legal battle over his past.

At the time, he was suspected of having been a notorious concentration camp guard, known by the nickname "Ivan the Terrible".

But his name was eventually cleared in an Israeli court and he was spared the death penalty.

Lack of evidence

The Board of Immigration Appeals upheld the 2005 deportation order which said there was no evidence to prove Mr Damjanjuk would be tortured if returned to the Ukraine.

"Simply put, the respondent's arguments regarding the likelihood of torture are speculative and not based on evidence in record," the board stated.

Mr Damjanjuk's lawyer, John Broadley said he was studying the ruling.

"What their reasoning is, we'll have to take a look at, and federal courts will have to look at it, too," he said.

His son, John Demjanjuk Jr, believed an appeal could still be made, adding: "We're not aware of any country offering to accept him from the United States."

The US Justice Department said efforts were continuing to remove him from the country as soon as possible.

Citizenship battle

Mr Demjanjuk returned to the US and his citizenship - which he had lost for allegedly lying to US immigration officials - was restored in 1998.

However, in 2002, an immigration judge ruled that there was enough evidence to prove Mr Demjanjuk had been a guard at several Nazi death camps and again stripped him of his citizenship.

He lost an appeal against the decision in 2004.

Mr Demjanjuk has always insisted he was a prisoner of war with the Nazis, rather than a guard serving under them.

But his 2002 hearing found that he had been an armed guard at the Sobibor, Majdanek and Flossenburg concentration camps where tens of thousands of Jews were killed.

BBC News

Rocky: Pat Robertson Interviews Stallone

Rocky: Pat Robertson Interviews Stallone

CBN News

CBNNews.com - The last installment of the "Rocky" movies, "Rocky Balboa," opened in theaters this week.

And for his final round as the "Italian Stallion," Sylvester Stallone is bringing something new into the ring: Christianity.

"Rocky Balboa" opened Wednesday, and is expected to do well at the box office over the holiday week.

Watch the video by copying and pasting the below link into your address bar...

mms://sm1.cbn.org/News/Archive/HighRes/NewsWatch122206_H_000341p8000945p6.wmv

Watch the video of Pat Robertson's interview with Stallone about the film's spiritual side, on our video player, above.

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