Christian couples beaten and burned in kiln in pakistan

A Christian couple near Lahore in Pakistan has been beaten to death by a mob for allegedly desecrating the Quran, according to the Express Tribune.

A local police station official in Kot Radha Kishan, 40 miles from Lahore, said that the bodies of the couple, identified by their first names, Shama and Shehzad, were burnt in the brick kiln where they worked.

“Yesterday an incident of desecration of the Holy Quran took place in the area and today the mob first beat the couple and later set their bodies on fire at a brick kiln,” he said.

Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has constituted a three-member committee to fast-track the investigation of the killings and ordered police to increase security at Christian neighbourhoods in the province.

Brick kiln labourers are subjected to harsh working practices, with the Bonded Labour Liberation Front Pakistan estimating that 4.5 million are indentured labourers with no freedom of movement. They are paid as little as £1.30 a day and child labour is common: according to ActionAid, up to 1.7million children from the age of five are working in illegal brick factories for up to 14 hours a day.

Blasphemy is a sensitive issue in Pakistan, with allegations often prompting mob violence.

A Christian woman, Asia Bibi, has been on death row since November 2010 after she was found guilty of making derogatory remarks about the Prophet Mohammed during an argument with a Muslim woman. Politicians such as Salman Tasir and Shahbaz Bhatti who have attempted to stand up for minority rights have been assassinated.
Source:Christian Today

Christian prompted by churches and other organizations to vote

Christians prompted by churches and a host of faith-based advocacy organizations to exercise their right to vote and help shape America’s culture and future, are expected to flood the polls in the name of Jesus Tuesday.
From abortion to racial justice, Christians prompted by churches and a host of faith-based advocacy organizations to exercise their right to vote and help shape America’s culture and future, are expected to flood the polls in the name of Jesus and a long list of other causes Tuesday.
“We wanted to encourage our people to register to vote and to vote. We believe that voting is a Christian responsibility in the government that we live in. We are the government. We can’t blame the country’s problems on someone else except for ourselves,” said Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel in an interview with The Christian Post Monday.

“As Christians, we have an obligation to be involved in our culture and voting is an extension of our values. If we believe in the sanctity of life we can’t appoint an agent that opposes the values that we believe. … Silence is not an option, voting is a responsibility we want to make,” noted Staver.

Liberty Counsel is one of several Christian organizations that have joined together to form a coalition called Christians Vote.

“Many Christian organizations, ministries and churches have joined together to form a coalition committed to mobilizing and educating Christian voters for the midterm elections on Nov. 4. Wins in the midterms will give us a changed Senate and the leverage to prevail in 2016. Believing that there is power in unity, the coalition is committed to partnering together to achieve common goals and impact the future of our nation,” explains the coalition on its website.

“We encourage people to vote their biblical values. We don’t tell them who to vote for. We encourage them to match their biblical values with the candidate’s position. For tomorrow (Tuesday) we are looking forward to a good voter turnout. I think our constituents really believe that America is on a lost track and in dire straits,” said Staver.

Allan Parker, president of the Justice Foundation, said his organization was inspired to join the coalition because of America’s departure from traditional Christian values and the government’s attack on those values.

The Justice Foundation promotes pro-life issues and school choice.

“I think that the assault on Christian values and the abandonment of government by Christians convinced us that it was very important, theologically, to get Christians involved in righteous government again,” said Parker.
believe that when Christians don’t vote and don’t participate in government they are demonstrating lovelessness for their neighbor, and they are not being salt and light as Jesus commanded us. And when we abandon the field the darkness wins. Only by being in the sphere of government can we influence government, and Christians need to vote and be willing to serve in government because they love their neighbor as themselves,” he continued.

Asked how his organization has been working to get out Christian voters, Parker said they focused on general education.

“We’ve just been talking with pastors about the need to promote civic duty and Christian love of neighbor and preach biblically based sermons on the issues of the day. That’s all we’ve done,” he said.

Based on the reactions he has seen in the Christian community to this message, however, he wasn’t very impressed.

“I think there’s still a lot of lethargy and slumber in the church and neglect of duty that I’m hopeful we’ll see a slight increase in (voter) turnout,” he said.
In a release promoting the coalition, Sam Rohrer, president of the American Pastors Network, said religious liberty will be at stake Tuesday.
“This will be perhaps one of the most important elections of our time,” said Rohrer. “Those we elect to office have a lasting effect on every community in America. Our voice as the people protects our constitutional rights and God-given liberties as they are attacked every day in this nation. And our voice as Christians protects the religious freedoms and rights to conscience that we hold dear. Should we abdicate our duty to vote, we will find our freedoms a thing of the past.”

Pointing to a 1781 statement made by one of America’s founding fathers, Samuel Adams, Rohrer noted: “Let each citizen remember at the moment he’s offering his vote that he is not making a present or a compliment to please an individual — or at least that he ought not to do so; but that he is executing one of the most solemn trusts in human society for which he is accountable to God and his country.”

“It is the duty and obligation of Christians to vote for individuals whose character and beliefs comport with the Word of God. Casting our ballots for any who openly disregard God’s law and the rule of law is not simply a poor decision; it is a dereliction of our Christian duty, and we will be held accountable for it,” he ended.

Other efforts from organizations like the PICO National Network, which describes itself as the largest grassroots, faith-based organizing network in America, noted in a release that they intend to do intensive voter outreach until Nov. 4 with a focus on black and Hispanic voters.

“Volunteer faith leaders from PICO have already had more than 400,000 conversations with voters about faith and voting. They plan to talk to 125,000 more people in these final four days leading up to Nov. 4,” explained the release.

The organization noted that the get-out-the-vote efforts are being led in key battleground states, such as Florida, Louisiana and Colorado. The efforts focused on ballot initiatives such as Question 4 in Massachusetts regarding earned sick time and California’s Proposition 47 that would reclassify many non-violent felonies as misdemeanors, according to the release.

“As a person of faith, every single conversation we’re having on the doors or on the phones is a sacred act that will bring people to the polls whose voices would not otherwise be heard,” said Rosie Washington, a lead community organizer with the Micah Project in New Orleans. “As faith voters, especially those of us in the African-American community, we cannot and will not stand on the sidelines while families around us are struggling to make ends meet, to find good jobs, to take care of their kids, and to get back on their feet.”
Source:Christian Post

ISIS detained kurdish children

Islamic State militants have detained and tortured Kurdish children, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has confirmed.

Stories from four teenage boys who were released in September reveal repeated beatings, intense “religious instruction” and forced viewings of brutal violence and beheadings.

“Those who didn’t conform to the program were beaten. They beat us with a green hose or a thick cable with wire running through it. They also beat the soles of our feet,” one 16-year-old recalled.

“I was once put inside the tire and beaten. They sometimes found excuses to beat us for no reason…They made us learn verses of the Quran and beat those who didn’t manage to learn them. When some boys tried to escape, the treatment got worse and we were all punished and given less food.”

The boys were part of a group of around 250 children from Kobani who were taken by ISIS on May 29 this year. They were travelling home after having taken school exams in Aleppo.

All of the girls, numbering around 100, were released several hours later. The boys were kept at a school in Manbij, about 30 miles southwest of their hometown.

Some managed to escape and the rest were gradually released or traded for ISIS fighters. The last 25 were freed on October 29.

Now seeking protection in Turkey, the boys report that those with relatives in Kurdish armed group the People’s Protection Units (YPG) received particularly harsh treatment during detention.

“It was really those whose families were close to the YPG who suffered most,” one 15-year-old said.

“They [ISIS militants] told them to give them the addresses of their families, cousins, uncles, saying ‘When we go to Kobani we will get them and cut them up.’ They saw the YPG as kafir [unbelievers].”

He added that electric cables were sometimes used in beatings, and described one punishment during which a child was strung up with his hands and one of his feet tied behind his back.

Special advisor for children’s rights at HRW, Fred Abrahams, explained that young people in Syria are particularly vulnerable.

“Since the beginning of the Syrian uprising, children have suffered the horrors of detention and torture, first by the Assad government and now by ISIS,” he said.

“This evidence of torture and abuse of children by ISIS underlines why no one should support their criminal enterprise.”

Though the boys are now free, ISIS, which is attempting to create a caliphate across a northern stretch of Iraq and Syria, has since taken more hostages. A number of children and adults from villages near Kobani are currently being held.

Both taking hostages and administering torture are war crimes under international humanitarian law.

“Governments in the Middle East and the West should swiftly implement the UN Security Council resolutions aimed at curbing support for ISIS. To stem ISIS abuses, governments need to tackle its fundraising and recruitment,” Abrahams said.
Kobani is now seen by many as a symbolic test of the US-led coalition’s ability to halt the advance of Islamic State, which has poured weapons and fighters into its assault of the town that has lasted more than a month.

The battle has deflected attention from significant gains elsewhere in Syria by Islamic State, which has seized two gas fields within a week from President Bashar al-Assad’s forces in the center of the country.

Weeks of fighting have taken place within full view of the Turkish border, causing outrage among Kurds in Turkey who blamed their government for doing too little to help defend the town.

The arrival in Kobani of the Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga and additional Syrian Free Syrian Army (FSA) fighters in recent days has escalated efforts to defend the town after weeks of US-led air strikes slowed but did not reverse the Islamists’ advance.

White smoke billowed into the sky as peshmerga and FSA fighters appeared to combine forces, raining cannon and mortar fire down on Islamic State positions to the west of Kobani, a Reuters witness said.

The US military said it bombed Islamic State positions in Syria five times and in Iraq nine times on Sunday and Monday, including near Kobani.
An estimated 150 Iraqi Kurdish fighters crossed into Kobani with arms and ammunition from Turkey late on Friday, the first time Ankara has allowed reinforcements to reach the town.

“(Their) heavy weapons have been a key reinforcement for us. At the moment they’re mostly fighting on the western front, there’s also FSA there too,” said Meryem Kobane, a commander with the YPG, the main Syrian Kurdish armed group in Kobani.

She said fierce fighting was also continuing in eastern and southern parts of the city.

The peshmerga, the official security forces of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region, have deployed behind Syrian Kurdish forces and are supporting them with artillery and mortar fire, according to Ersin Caksu, a journalist inside Kobani. The fiercest fighting was taking place in the south and east, areas where the reinforcements were not deployed, he said.

Despite weeks of air strikes, Islamic State has continued to inflict heavy losses on Kobani’s defenders. Late last week hospital sources in Turkey reported a jump in the number of dead and wounded Kurdish fighters being brought across the frontier.
Source: Christian Today

Isreal starts plan for settlers in East Jerusalem

An Israeli government committee on Monday advanced plans for 500 settler homes in East Jerusalem, an official said, in the face of disapproval from the United States at construction on occupied Palestinian land.

The Interior Ministry panel’s preliminary approval of the new homes for Ramat Shlomo, a neighborhood built on West Bank territory captured in the 1967 war and annexed to Jerusalem in a move not recognised abroad, was kept low profile in an apparent bid to avoid friction with Washington.

A week ago, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered plans for some 600 housing units for Ramat Shlomo and 400 others for Har Homa, another East Jerusalem neighborhood, to be advanced.

Palestinian officials have voiced alarm, echoed in the international community, over the settlements, viewing them as a main obstacle to founding the independent state they seek in the West Bank and Gaza Strip with East Jerusalem as its capital.

An Interior Ministry spokeswoman did not immediately confirm Monday’s committee decision, details of which were relayed to Reuters by an Israeli official on condition of anonymity.

The official said Israel hoped to avoid publicity around the move, one in a series of logistical and legal stages before construction begins. The number of new homes planned for Ramat Shlomo had been reduced, the official said, because of environmental concerns.

In Washington, US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the reports contradicted the Israeli government’s stated goal of a peace agreement.

“This flies in the face of that,” Psaki told reporters at her daily briefing, saying the United States had seen reports of the planned construction but not any details.

“It is unfortunate for this to move forward given not just the view of the United States, but the view of many in the international community,” she added.

The European Union asked Israel for clarifications about Netanyahu’s promotion of the Har Homa and Ramat Shlomo projects.

Netanyahu, whose relations with US President Barack Obama have long been strained, also drew criticism from the White House earlier this month after some two dozen Jewish families moved into homes purchased in an Arab neighborhood of East Jerusalem where about 500 settlers already live.
Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement movement, has warned that moving forward with the Har Homa and Ramat Shlomo plans could further inflame tensions in East Jerusalem, the scene of daily confrontations between stone-throwing Palestinians and police in riot gear.

Israel regards all of Jerusalem as its “indivisible and eternal” capital, a claim not recognised internationally, and says Jews have the right to live anywhere in the city.

Some 500,000 Israelis have settled in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, among 2.4 million Palestinians. The World Court says settlements Israel has built there are illegal, a view Israel disputes.
Source: Christian Today

Tolerance for other faiths and lifestyles promoted by Church of England schools

The Church of England has indicated it will comply with new rules that will compel all schools including faith schools actively to promote fundamental British values, including tolerance for other faiths and lifestyles.

Nicky Morgan, the education secretary, revealed at the weekend that guidance on new rules introduced in the wake of the “Trojan Horse” scandal in Birmingham will be issued to private schools, academies and free schools this week.

Inspectors will be able to take action against schools that do not conform to the Equality Act, which encourages respect for lesbian, gay and transgender people along with other religions and races.

Although the Trojan Horse affair, when a number of individuals attempted to introduce extremist Islamist concepts, did not concern faith schools, Ofsted made snap inspections of 40 schools including Christian and Jewish faith schools in its wake.

Some of the schools inspected say they have been penalised for not celebrating enough festivals of other faiths, not giving children sex education lessons, not teaching them to be tolerant of homosexuality and not inviting faith leaders to speak at assemblies, the Sunday Times reported.

However the Church of England today reinforced its commitment to encouraging community cohesion through its 4,700 schools.

One in four primary schools and one in 16 secondary schools in England are Church of England schools, educating nearly a million pupils.

Rev Nigel Genders, the Church’s chief education officer, said: “Church of England schools have always been committed to providing a high quality education for all young people, of all faiths and none.

“Clearly this must include rigorous and challenging religious education to equip young people with the knowledge and understanding of a range of faith systems. We were delighted that the government recently acted to support us in doing this by providing bursaries for those training to teach RE.

“We take just as seriously our role to ensure that the rights of LGBT young people are included in the curriculum and that they feel welcome in our schools. That is why we developed a resource to help all schools combat homophobic bullying. We are delighted that the Secretary of State is now funding a major project on this issue.

“All our schools teach about same sex marriage being the law, but we also feel it is important to reflect that there are different views on marriage, including that of the Church, and we would expect all schools to do the same.”

Morgan, a committed Christian who has changed her mind and now supports same-sex marriage, told the Sunday Times it was “crucial” that Christian and Jewish schools, as well as Muslim ones, followed the new rules.

She said: “Schools should broaden horizons not close minds … and should encourage pupils to respect other people, even if they do not agree with them. I should have thought this is a principle with which the vast majority of people would agree. All schools, of whatever type, have a duty to protect young people and to ensure they leave school fully prepared for life in modern Britain.”
She added: “These values – democracy, the rule of law, individual liberty, and mutual respect and tolerance of those with different faiths and beliefs – are not new. The requirement to ‘actively promote’ them is designed to reinforce the importance this government attaches to these values.”

A Jewish school for girls in Salford last week was placed in special measures after Ofsted inspectors said there were “major gaps” in students’ spiritual, moral, social and cultural development and ruled that students are not provided with sufficient opportunities to learn about or understand people of other faiths or cultures and did not prepare students adequately for life in modern Britain.

Last week the govrnment announced a £2 million package for schools to help them tackle homophobic bullying.

The cash will be given to charitable and not-for-profit organisations who can come up with “creative ideas” to stamp out the bullying.

Jo Swinson, Minister for Women and Equalities, said: “Young people should grow up feeling safe expressing who they are, and we know that homophobic bullying stands in the way of this.

“We know the damage bullies can cause to young people’s self-esteem and educational attainment. There should be absolutely no excuse for this taking place in our schools.”
The law was changed in 2012 to strengthen the powers teachers have to enforce discipline and good behaviour. Schools have been given advice on their legal duties and powers, and other resources to help them put an end to bullying.
Source:Christian Today

At Last, There is an Opposition

As more Catholic and Jesuit universities in the United States begin offering benefits to the same-sex spouses of their employees, Catholic church leaders are starting to speak out in objection to their local universities starting to provide those benefits to gay and lesbian spouses.
Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska became the latest Jesuit institution to offer the benefits to the same-sex spouses of their employees, as the school announced the change in its policy last week.
Although the state of Nebraska currently has a ban against gay marriage, the president of Creighton University, the Rev. Timothy Lannon, said the decision was made so that those employees who were wed to a member of the same-sex in another state could receive the same treatment all of the other married employees are receiving.

“Many other Catholic universities, including 21 of the 28 Jesuit universities in the U.S., have done the same,” Lannon said in a letter to the university’s board of trustees. “The extension of benefits is not a statement of approval of same-sex marriages but rather an acknowledgement of our responsibility to serve the needs of faculty and staff who faithfully serve our students and patients every day.”

Archbishop of Omaha, George Lucas, issued a statement last week stating that he thought the Creighton’s decision disobeyed the Lord’s will, which calls for marriage to be between only a man and a women.

“Despite Father Lannon’s claim that this is not a statement of approval of same-sex marriages, this is precisely the message that the University is giving,” Lucas wrote. “I am dismayed that the recommendation of the University Benefits Committee is thought to supersede divine law regarding marriage.”
Lucas further opined that in the battle between religious beliefs and the modern political climate, it is acceptable for a Catholic institution to stick by its “Catholic Intellectual tradition.” He criticized the school for not doing that.
“There is no tension between Catholic teaching and social justice. Both are grounded in the same truths about the nature of the human person, the complementarity of man and woman and the meaning of human life and love,” Lucas wrote. “When we experience tension in ensuring respect and just treatment for all persons, including those with same-sex attraction, we have a right to expect a Catholic university to help us see a just path forward, rooted in faith and founded on the rich Catholic intellectual tradition. Creighton has failed to fulfill this expectation in this expansion of benefits.”
Former Vice Chancellor of the Omaha Archdiocese Ryan Lewis also thinks the school’s decision abandons God’s will.

“The Church needs to teach clearly on this and sadly strong winds of popular culture is blowing and Father Lannon put his finger up in the air to see which way the wind was blowing and abandoned what is divine law on marriage,” Lewis told the Nebraska Radio Network.

Notre Dame University in Indiana announced in early October that it would extend its benefits to the same-sex spouses of its employees. Unlike Creighton in Nebraska, Notre Dame officials believe they were physically required by the Indiana’s law to offer to the benefits to same-sex spouses, since Indiana recently began recognizing same-sex marriages.

Although Notre Dame felt it was required to offer the benefits, university officials say that the school still supports the traditional Catholic teaching of marriage. However, Notre Dame president, the Rev. John Jenkins, also said this move would act as a call to “cherish” gays in the community.

“We recognize an urgent call to welcome, support, and cherish gay and lesbian brothers and sisters, who have been too often marginalized and even ostracized, and many of whom bear the scars of such treatment,” Jenkins said.
Bishop Kevin Rhoades of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend wrote in a column in his diocese newspaper that although Notre Dame has affirmed its belief in the traditional Catholic teaching of marriage, the school should lobby for religious exemption when it comes to providing health benefits.

“As a Catholic university, it is important that Notre Dame continues to affirm its fidelity to Catholic teaching on the true nature of marriage as a union of one man and one woman,” Rhoades said. “I have communicated to Notre Dame my conviction that this affirmation should also include efforts to defend the religious liberty of our religious institutions that is threatened in potentially numerous ways by the legal redefinition of marriage, including the government forcing our Catholic institutions to extend any special benefits we afford to actual marriage to same-sex ‘marriage’ as well.

” I have asked the Notre Dame administration to work together with the Indiana Catholic Conference on these efforts.”
Source:Christian Post

This is What Happens When GOD Decides to Favour You

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45kCJ1GX3O4[/youtube]

Credit : HomeTV Belgium

This is what happens when GOD’s spirit shows up! My GOD who hears the silent prayers in the corner and BLESSES in the open!

WOW! I’ve watched this video for more than 10x and I’m AMAZED and in TEARS every time. GOD showed up for this woman at the right time and met her NEEDS through the church. This is what CHURCH should be about…

LORD, please single us out for such great blessing! Let people RUN and QUEUE up just to bless us and please give us the grace to be a blessing unto others, as the congregation of this church has!

This is AMAZING….SHARE SHARE SHARE!

GOD is good and he never gives part of your blessings…He gives the WHOLE! — at West Angeles Church, US

———————-

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Religious Leader Appeals For Prayers

Church services are going ahead as normal in most parts of Burkina Faso as pro-democracy protesters continue to take to the streets.

Earlier this week violent scenes forced President Blaise Compaore to resign following 27 years in power.

Opposition leaders have been urging Mr Compaore not to seek re-election next year in what would have been his fifth term in power.

But when his party looked set to approve a bill allowing him to run again protesters stormed the parliament and set it on fire.

The army has taken over presidential duties but it’s still unclear who has overall control of the West African country.

Revd Pius Akator from Lighthouse Chapel in the capital Ouagadougou told Premier the protestors were not attacking religion and most Christians were safe.

He said: “Christians are not being attacked. The whole issue is not yet religious.

“But Christians are praying. We started praying last year, praying for the country and praying for peace.”

Burkina Faso is a majority Muslim country but there’s a sizeable Christian minority of around 20%.

The country hosts French special forces and is an important ally of both France and the US in the fight against Islamic militants in West Africa.

It’s one of the world’s poorest countries and is often troubled by famine and drought.

Revd Akator added: “Christians in the UK should continue praying for us in Burkina Faso.

“Pray for our leaders, we pray that God will raise up leaders and we pray for the whole country.”

Source and Original Content by Premier Radio News

16 Year Old Bags Life Imprisonment For Murder Of Catholic Teacher

The violent killing of Ann Maguire in April shook the nation – it was the murder of a woman described as the ‘rock’ at the centre of her family.

She was a dedicated and committed Catholic who, as well as teaching Spanish, also took religious education classes.

The Pope led the tributes at the time of her death.

Francis asked his British ambassador, Archbishop Antonio Mennini, to send his condolences.

He wrote a letter which said: “Having learnt that sad news of the tragic murder of Mrs Ann Maguire last Monday at Corpus Christi Catholic College in Leeds, I should like to convey to you as well as to Mrs Maguire’s family, friends colleagues and the whole community of Corpus Christi College, the spiritual closeness of the Holy Father, Pope Francis as well as my sincere sympathy in these difficult moments.

“I assure you of my prayers for the repose of the soul of Mrs Maguire and for the consolation and strengthening of all those persons close to her and all those who mourn her sudden death.

“May the Lord grant her eternal rest and reward of her life of dedication and of service to young people and to education.”

Mrs Maguire had taught at Corpus Christi Catholic College, in Leeds, for more than 40 years and was due to retire in September.

She was regarded as the “mother of the school” and its “heartbeat”.

One colleague said: “If you cut Ann Maguire in half you would see ‘Corpus Christi’ running through her.”

At her memorial service in September, her daughter Kerry told crowds gathered outside: “One of Ann’s life principles as a teacher was ‘you can never put a limit on a child’s potential’.”

Her pupils were asked to pick one word to describe the teacher.

”Perfect”, ”passionate”, ”fantastic”, ”amazing” and ”warm”.

Source and Original Content by Premier Radio News

Iraqi Government To Send Extra Troops To Defend Persecuted Christians

The Iraqi Prime Minister has pledged to put more troops in areas of Baghdad where Christians are being persecuted, and says he feels “personally responsible” for protecting them.

Haider al Abadi met with Christian leaders from churches in Baghdad, led by the Patriarch of the Chaldean Church, Primate Raphael Louis I.

During the meeting the Church leaders reminded Prime Minister al Abadi of recent violence towards Christians in some areas of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

Primate Raphael told the Catholic news agency Fides: “In the 40-minute talk Prime Minister al Abadi, a Shiite Muslim, repeated several times he personally feels responsible for the protection and defence of Christian citizens also.

“He deplored the phenomenon of the exodus of Christians, defining it as a great loss to the nation.

“With regard to the tragic story of the land fallen under the control of the Islamic Caliphate[I.S.], we urged the Prime Minister to promote in every way the liberation of the occupied lands.

“With much realism he acknowledged that military action will not be enough to solve the problem and that, in the long run, a process that removes the roots of the phenomenon, and brings out the true face of Islam open and respectful of all rights should be encouraged.

“Recently some Christians were kidnapped and some houses of Christian families were attacked by a group of criminals who wanted to occupy them.

“The Prime Minister has promised that he will enhance the presence of military units in the neighbourhoods, and also said he was willing to co-opt another Christian minister in the government.

“I was told me he is a man of word and keeps his promises”.

Islamic State has captured various parts of northern and western Iraq while the United States of America has used dozens of air strike to repel the Muslim extremist group.

In September some militants were less than six miles (10km) from Baghdad although they’ve been pushed back.

Source and Original Content by Premier Radio News