Monday 16 September 2013

COUNTRY OF THE WEEK

ALGERIA ( Capital : Algiers )
Location - North Africa on the Mediterranean coast
Population - 37,900,000
Languages- Arabic and  Berber
Religion -  Sunni Islam 99% (state religion), Christians and Jews 1%

PRAYER REQUEST
  1. Pray for persecuted Christians as they are denied the right to exercise religious freedom so Most Christians meet in homes, to protect themselves. So the Christian population/ Missionary groups can only conduct humanitarian activities without government interference as long as they are discreet and do not proselytize openly. Since 2006 missionary outreach among Muslims can be punished with up to five years in prison. Pray that Algerian believers will respond to pressure with faith and perseverance and continue to grow, pray for teachers, Bible and Commentaries to become available to every believer.

2.       When questioned about Muslims becoming Christians in 2001 the Algerian Minister of Religion affirmed that apostates from Islam should be killed, according to Islamic Shari'a law. Police publicly body-search and interrogate even lady converts for practicing Christianity, they are fined a huge sum of money and asked to renounce their faith or face the law. Pray God will use the current restrictions to draw many more Algerians into a relationship with Christ. Pray for conversions to Jesus Christ  among powerful Government/Islamic leaders in Algeria.

  1. Pray for the nation’s young people, who make up 65 to 70 percent of the population (and a large majority of Christians). Pray they will not be frustrated or disillusioned, but rather strengthened and encouraged in Christ Jesus.
  2. The media attention will have a positive impact on the church, drawing more people to respond to the love and truth of Jesus Christ. The search and hunger by many for a God of love to increase and blossom in finding Jesus Christ as the answer
  3. The Berber people could make up as much as 40 percent of the population, but the Arab majority have tried to impose their culture on them and stopped them from using their own language. Thousands in the Kabyle region have become Christians and meet openly in their villages. Pray for these churches that they would be protected and grow in their faith in God.


Monday 9 September 2013

IRAN: “FIRST RELIGIOUSLY MOTIVATED MURDER OF AN IRANIAN BAHA'I IN 15 YEARS”

Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) is concerned to learn of the murder on 24 August of Ataollah Rezvani, a prominent member of Iran's Baha’i community, in what the Baha’i Community of the United Kingdom (UK) is stating may be the first religiously motivated murder of an Iranian Baha'i in 15 years.


 
Mr Rezvani’s body was found in his car in his hometown, the southern city of Bandar Abbas.  Reports indicate he was shot in the back of the head after being forced to drive to a remote area by his assailants.According to the Baha’i Community of the UK, the murder was preceded by a campaign of intimidation and harassment by Iranian authorities against Mr Rezvani and his family designed to force them to leave the city. Prior to his murder, Mr Rezvani had come under pressure from the Ministry of Intelligence, which later colluded in his dismissal from his job in water purification. Mr Rezvani had also received several threatening telephone calls from unknown persons.

Mr Rezvani’s murder also comes at a time of increased pressure on Iran's religious minorities and a surge in anti-Baha’i rhetoric by various clerics. On 31 July 2013, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameni issued a fatwa (religious edict) against the community in which he called on Iranians to avoid Baha’is and labelled them a ‘deviant and misleading sect’.Despite the Baha’i Community being the largest religious minority group in Iran, it is not officially recognised and is refused legal status.  Since 1979, over 200 of its leaders have been killed or executed, and thousands more imprisoned. Baha’is are barred from accessing further education and employment in the public sector, with over 10,000 having been dismissed from university and government jobs.  In 2008, seven Baha’i leaders were arrested and were each sentenced to 20 years imprisonment in 2010 for ‘forming an illegal cult’.  According to the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCRIF), as of February 2013, at least 110 Bahia’s are being held in prison solely on account of their religious belief, twice the number held in early 2011.

Mervyn Thomas, Chief Executive of Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), said: “We are shocked to hear of the murder of Mr Rezvani and are deeply concerned at assertions that it may have been religiously-motivated.  His murder followed a campaign of official harassment and occurred against the backdrop of increasing anti-Baha’i rhetoric, not least the recent fatwa against the community issued by the Supreme Leader. History shows that such rhetoric and hate speech increases the vulnerability of targeted communities and can be a precursor of violence because it appears to grant official sanction for it. CSW urges the Iranian authorities to end the use of inflammatory rhetoric against minority religious communities that merely seek to practice their faith peaceably and pose no threat to the state. CSW also urges Iran to ensure the killers of Mr Rezvani are swiftly brought to justice, to return full citizenship rights to the Baha’i Community and to guarantee freedom of religion and belief for all religious communities, in accordance with the nation's obligations as a signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).”