Friday 22 September 2017

Prayer Requests

Today's Prayer Requests

VERA BANKSTON-JONES | FATHER GOD, PPL GO THROUGH HELLS THAT YOU NEVER KNOW ABOUT, YET "YOU" KNOW! COMFORT THEM AND HELP US ALL THROUGH THE HELLS ON EARTH!.......SELAH

Ronald Lake |  Please pray for me I surely have a heavy heart, pray for my family my wife and kids but I must say the devil has tried to destroy me in every way possible. Thank you Gods blessings to you all.

PST KISIA OTIENO NICHOLAS | We kindly request any born again Christian to stand with us in prayer.After the disputed elections,I together with my friends and neighbours whom we live together with lost everything after violence erupted in the slums where we live.Any one with a heart to help please help us.We are really suffering.We know God is not late and he can use anyone to intervene in our situation and you who reads this can be the one God has set to use to rescue us.May the Almighty God bless you

vijay aggarwal | Plz pray for money in abundance for a comfortable life

Akeem Womble | I would like prayer for a friend of mine. My friend is going through a bitter divorce and his wife has gotten a restraining order against him and will not allow him to see or talk to his children and he really wants to see them and talk to them.
My friend has told me that his wife has gone to our church and told everyone lies about him and he is very upset about it and everyone is taking her side and that they do not know the full story. So please pray for my friend that God will help him through all of this and so his mind and heart will be at restored

Nigeria Church leaders condemn killing of Christian student in Jos

Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) condemn killing of Christian student


Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN)
NIGERIA: The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Plateau State Chapter has condemned the attack on Igbo Christians by Muslim youths in Jos last Thursday, which wiped out your final year information technology student from the College of Jos, Jerry Mantim Binkur, and hurt a minimum of five people.

The association, inside a statement, pleaded with “the Igbos around the Plateau to stay calm as nobody will keep these things leave Plateau.” Soja Bewarang, its Chairman stated. He known as on Christians to “wise up and work with each other to frustrate the types of crooks within our midst.”

Reacting towards the attack, youths groups in the predominantly Christian Middle Belt region, in an announcement, 15th September cautioned the Muslim youths either to embrace peace or leave the location. Inside a statement distributed around Global Christian News, Lawyer Seth Mangset, Plateau State Coordinator from the group stated, “We know the unfortunate development that is going to resurrect around the Plateau by a few unscrupulous miscreants whose job would be to raise crisis within the condition as a consequence of the strain over the country… Individuals who feel warmongering is the method of existence aren't welcomed around the Plateau.”

The statement cautioned the group won't “hesitate to do something if the fails. We will be ready to safeguard lives and property of peace loving individuals the condition.”


The governors from the south-eastern a part of Nigeria, appearing out of an urgent situation meeting in the government house, Enugu, on Friday, 15 September, made the decision to ban all activities from the Igbo groups seeking self-actualization.

Nigeria Map
Inside a communique released following the meeting, Chairman, East Governors Forum, Nweze Dave Umahi, Governor of Ebonyi State, stated, “All activities of IPOB are hereby proscribed. IPOB and all sorts of other aggrieved groups are encouraged to articulate their position on all National issues and undergo the Committee of Governors, Ohaneze Ndigbo and National Assembly member in the East Zone, via the Chairman, East Governors Forum.”

The governors reiterated the phone call “for the restructuring of Nigeria where all National issues is going to be discussed and amicably settled to attain justice and fairness to each Nigerian.”

The Muslim group, Jama’atu Nasril Islam in Plateau State, through its Director of Publicity, Sani Mudi, on its part, noted the Muslim youths acted “clearly as a result of the unfortunate occasions within the East.Inches Then he attracted “Muslim Ummah and everyone within the State to shun functions able to disrupting our precious peace within the State.” that they stated “are unacceptable.”

Mudi added, “The sad saga of disruption of peace and lawlessness in certain areas isn't worth our response with the exception of the exhibition of mature and civil way, having faith in that appropriate government bodies can handle responding because the situation warrants.”





SOURCE

Thursday 21 September 2017

Nigeria:Plateau State violence threatened the nation

Calm returns to Jos after eruption of violence that threatened the nation

Nigeria Map with Zones

NIGERIA
: A sense of normality has returned to the city of Jos, in Nigeria’s central Plateau State, after an eruption of inter-religious violence claimed at least three lives on 14 September.

One of them was Jerry Binkur, a final-year student at the University of Jos, who was a member of COCIN Church.

Several others were injured in attacks by a mob. One of them died from his wounds in the hospital, but his name is yet to be confirmed.

Professor Timothy O. Oyetunde, Dean of the School of Postgraduate Studies, was another of those attacked, at about 6.30pm.

According to his statement, the Christian professor was about to leave the university, when suddenly some Muslim youths armed with machetes, daggers, and other weapons surrounded his car. They first shattered the windscreen using large stones. Someone in the passenger seat, not yet identified, was stabbed in the chest, while Professor Ema Ema, sitting directly behind Professor Oyetunde, was stabbed in the head. Professor Oyetunde escaped with minor injuries, narrowly avoiding a machete which instead shattered the window glass. His car was later set ablaze.

Hundreds, if not thousands, of people have been killed in ethnic and religious clashes in Plateau in recent years.

This week a dusk-to-dawn curfew, imposed by the governor last Thursday (14 September), has been relaxed to 10pm to 6am. Still, heavily armed soldiers and police remain on patrol at flashpoints such as Terminus Roundabout (in the city centre), ?Kataka Market (which acts as a boundary between Muslim and Christian communities), Chobe Junction (a settlement dominated by Christians from the ethnic Igbo people) and Bauchi Road (dominated by Hausa Muslims).

On Sunday (17 September) security was beefed up in churches for fear of attacks. At Living Faith Church, on Recard Road, heavily armed soldiers, police and members of the Nigeria Civil Defence were deployed to prevent violence.

At Faithway Bible Church in the neighbouring city of Bukuru, the congregation prayed for total restoration of peace in Plateau State and across Nigeria. Pastor Theophilus Akaniro?, who led the prayers, also prayed for Nigeria’s upcoming Independence Day on 1 October.

But in general there was low turnout in local churches last Sunday, perhaps for fear of attacks.

This week, across the city, shops have re-opened, life has resumed, and traffic has returned to the busy Ahmadu Bello Way. ?Shop owners have expressed relief that normality has been restored.

What triggered the violence?


Thursday’s violence in Jos was triggered by the activism of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), a predominantly Igbo group in southeast Nigeria, responsible for killing members of the Muslim Hausa community in the south in pursuit of its agenda.

The ‘Biafran War’ (1967-70) was fought to stop the south-east of Nigeria breaking away, soon after Nigeria’s independence from the British. Now it seems that this cause has re-ignited in the past few years.

IPOB militants and their leader, Nnamdi Kanu, think the Igbos have been marginalised by the government of President Muhammadu Buhari. They have repeatedly requested to break away from Nigeria, which the federal government has vehemently resisted.

Last week, the federal government deployed the Nigerian Army (Operation Python Dance) to counter IPOB protests, which had turned violent.

This deployment snowballed into violent confrontation between IPOB militants and the Army, leading to the death of many IPOB members.

This further led to IPOB members attacking the Hausa/Fulani Muslims living in the south-east of Nigeria (Port Harcourt and Umuahia States, in particular) because the IPOB consider Hausa Muslims to be President Buhari’s kinsmen.

Some Hausa Muslims were killed in this violence. This has then led to reprisal attacks across northern states, and in Plateau. (One youth movement, Arewa Youth, in northern Nigeria had in June reiterated its wish for Igbos to be expelled from northern states, giving a three-month deadline, 1 October.)

Why Plateau State matters


Nigeria, the most populous African country, is divided along ethnic and religious lines. The central state of Plateau is located on the fault line between the mainly Muslim north and the Christian and animist south. Some analysts think the Jos attack has the potential to upset the relative calm that has recently prevailed in Plateau, with potential consequences reaching far beyond.

city of Jos
Jos is seen almost as a miniature Nigeria, comprising almost all ethnic groups, but actually dominated by three predominantly Christian tribes (with the headquarters of many Nigerian Churches in Jos); a disruption to the peace in Jos could in turn affect the entire nation, and especially the Christian community in Nigeria.

Before the latest Jos violence, northern youths had previously issued other notices, demanding that all Igbos be kicked out of the northern states. They said that since the Igbos want their own country, they would force them to leave the north.

Some even suspect that that the reprisal attack in Jos against the Igbos was actually orchestrated from the far north because Nigerians would normally expect such attacks to take place in the predominantly Muslim northern cities like Kano, Kaduna, Katsina and Zamfara, but not in Jos.

It also shows that the recent peace in Plateau is still a very fragile one, and one that could collapse with a little provocation. The massacre of about 20 Christians by Fulani herdsmen, on 7 September, is an illustration.

Widespread condemnation


The violence was unanimously condemned by Christian and Muslim leaders.

“The peace of the State is the peace of the Church and society,” wrote Rev Soja Bewarang, chairman of the Plateau chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), in a statement. “Let us all wise up and work collectively to frustrate the designs of criminals in our midst. Information on social media must be verified with security agencies and nobody should take the law into their hands; enough of this madness.”

CAN also called on Igbos in Plateau to remain calm, assuring them that nobody had the right to ask them to leave the state - as some Muslim youths had suggested.

Meanwhile, the Plateau State chapter of Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI) appealed to members of the Muslim community and the general public to shun acts capable of disrupting the hard-earned peace in the state.

“JNI finds it necessary and of utmost importance to remind us that we in Plateau State had just in the last few years emerged from a decade-long ethno-religious conflict, which left us with unbearable socio-economic and political consequences,” read a statement signed by Sani Mudi, Director of Publicity of the JNI in Plateau.

It continued: “The sad saga of disruption of peace and lawlessness in some parts of the country is not worth our response, except in the exhibition of [a] mature and civil way, trusting that appropriate authorities are capable of responding as the situation warrants. We should therefore cherish our peaceful co-existence and do all within our power to sustain it, regardless of the provocation, as peace is priceless.”

The governor of Plateau, Simon Lalong, last Thursday met with community and religious leaders, and reaffirmed his determination to ensure security for all.

“I want to tell all citizens that their security and welfare as the primary concern of government is assured by the Rescue Administration. I am therefore enjoining all citizens to go about their business with the assurance that their safety is guaranteed,” he said.





cred: World Watch Monitor

Nepali Parliament makes Evangelism illegal

Evangelism to make illegal under new Nepal law


NEPAL: Religious conversion and also the ‘hurting of spiritual sentiment’, has been suspended through the Nepali Parliament recently (8 August). The Christian community fears the new law will escalate Christian persecution in the united states. Religious freedom agencies have expressed concern the new law effectively bans evangelism. Christian Unity World stated that the clause which criminalises the ‘hurting of spiritual sentiment’ is comparable to Pakistan’s blasphemy law to which it's a legal to ‘insult’ another’s belief.

“These laws and regulations are poorly defined and broadly misused to stay personal scores, to focus on religious minorities in order to further extremist agendas. “Decades of misuse from the blasphemy laws and regulations have resulted in times where even voicing disagreement using these laws and regulations can result in violence,” based on CSW. There's also concerns this law might be used from the Christian minority because it was utilized within the

Charikot situation in June 2016 where eight Christians who have been billed with disbursing Christian literature to children at two schools using the intention to transform them once they shared comic around the story of Jesus were arrested. It was the very first situation concerning freedom of faith within the good reputation for Nepal because the new metabolic rate was implemented in September 2015.

Anybody charged underneath the new law, including foreign visitors, could address five years imprisonment for trying to convert an individual or “undermine the faith, belief or thought that any caste, ethnic group or community continues to be observing since sanatan [eternal] occasions.” Anybody who “hurts religious sentiment” also faces as much as 2 yrs imprisonment and a pair of,000 rupee fine reported the Catholic Herald. Human legal rights defenders in Nepal are with the balance to become amended prior to it being placed prior to the President of Nepal for his approval. Lokmani Dhakal MP from the Janjagaran party of Nepal requested removing the sections criminalising religious conversion and told Parliament on 10 August:

“It appears very obvious in my experience this country while preparing the civil code has forgotten it's a signatory to worldwide agreements that safeguard the liberty of faith and human rights… you shouldn't allow it to be feasible for the planet to say on Nepal that we're the type of nation that around the one hands signs worldwide agreements however when making internal laws and regulations as well as in applying them, does another thing.Inches The metabolic rate establishes Nepal like a secular country with 81.3% population as Hindu, 9.% Buddhist, 4.4% Muslim, 3.% Kiratist (indigenous ethnic religion), 1.4% Christian, .2% Sikhs, .1% Jains and .6% follow other religions or no religion based on the 2011 census.

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