Militants have beheaded a Christian in Nigeria during Christmas and
New Year attacks, which claimed almost 30 lives. And in Iran,
authorities have rounded up more than 20 Christian leaders as they
gathered to celebrate the birth of Christ.
In three states
in Nigeria, attacks by militants have left at least 28 Christians
dead. On January 2, Fulani militants torched houses and killed 15
people in Ambe-Madaki village, Kaduna state. They killed ten others in
Tattaura in the same area on December 27.
In Plateau
state, Fulani gunmen killed three Christians in Kantoma village on New
Year's Eve. They beheaded one villager, creating a wave of panic.
Release's partner in Nigeria, who cannot be named, received
distress calls from villagers under attack asking for help. 'They said
that unless help came, they could be exterminated completely.' The
security services moved in to prevent further bloodshed, he added.
In Gombe city, Gombe state, a suicide bomber was prevented
from riding a motorbike into a New Year's Day church service. The
bomber detonated his suicide belt after being challenged by members of
the Boys' Brigade, who were helping police to keep the church secure,
according to Morning Star News.
The blast injured at least
eight Christians guarding the Evangelical Church Winning All building.
The day before, according to news reports, a female
suicide bomber attacked the military barracks in Gombe, and bombers
blew up a bus in neighbouring Yobe state, killing seven.
The explosions are thought to be the work of Islamist militants,
Boko Haram, who have declared an Islamic caliphate in northern
Nigeria.
Mercifully, churches - often the target of Boko
Haram bomb attacks - were spared over Christmas itself. And
government-imposed travel bans in the north-eastern Borno and Yobe
states may have helped reduce the expected violence over the Christmas
period.
'Christians in northern Nigeria face attack on two
fronts, by Fulani militants who want their land, and Boko Haram who
want an Islamic state,' says Release Chief Executive Paul Robinson.
'Release is concerned that Boko Haram could step up attacks in the
run-up to the Nigerian elections in February.'
Meanwhile,
in Iran, the authorities arrested nine Christians in a raid on a house
in Roudehen, west of Tehran, on Christmas Day. The next day, they
arrested a prominent Assyrian pastor, Victor Bet-Tamarz, at his home,
along with some 14 others who had gathered to celebrate Christmas.
Iranian pastor Farshid Fathi, who is serving a six-year
sentence in Karaj, was given an additional one-year sentence on
December 29. This was linked to the discovery of alcohol in Evin
Prison, where he was previously detained.
'Iranian
Christians call the regular roundup of believers at this time of year
their "Christmas gift" from the authorities,' says Paul Robinson, of
Release.
'What the attacks in Nigeria and the clampdown
in Iran have in common is an attitude of brutal intolerance towards
Christians and the belief that violent oppression can overcome
God-given freedom of faith. The 2,000 year history of the church
proves they are mistaken.'
Thursday 8th January 2015
Release International
About Release International
Through its international network of missions Release serves persecuted Christians in more than 30 countries, by supporting pastors and Christian prisoners, and their families; supplying Christian literature and Bibles; and working for justice.
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