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1/10/11 Worldwide (CDN) — Pakistan’s blasphemy laws led to the murder of two Christians and a

death penalty sentence for a Christian mother of five in 2010, topping Compass’ top 10 news

stories. Following this blend of state and societal violence to Christians was a spike in

attacks on Christians in Iraq; a possible death penalty for an Afghan Christian accused of

apostasy; a 17-year-old Somali girl’s martyrdom; and large-scale attacks on Christians in

Nigeria. The complete list follows.
 
1 – Pakistan’s Blasphemy Law Leads to Murder, Death Penalty for the Innocent
Pakistan’s widely condemned blasphemy laws led to the murder of two men and a death penalty

sentence for a mother of five in 2010. On July 19 in Faisalabad, Pakistan, a suspected

Islamic extremist shot dead two Christians accused of blasphemy. An armed gunman shot the

Rev. Rashid Emmanuel, 32, and his 30-year-old brother Sajid Emmanuel after handwriting

experts on July 14 notified police that signatures on papers denigrating Muhammad did not

match those of the accused. Expected to be exonerated, the two leaders of United Ministries

Pakistan were being led in handcuffs back to jail when they were shot. Advocacy group

representatives said the two bodies bore cuts and other signs of having been tortured while

the brothers were in police custody. Muslims had staged large demonstrations calling for the

death penalty for the brothers, who were arrested when Rashid Emmanuel agreed to meet a

mysterious caller at a train station but was instead surrounded by police carrying papers

denigrating Muhammad – supposedly signed by the pastor and his brother and bearing their

telephone numbers. The Muslim who allegedly placed the anonymous call to the pastor, Muhammad

Khurram Shehzad, also filed blasphemy charges against the brothers, said Atif Jamil Pagaan,

coordinator of the Harmony Foundation advocacy group. Khurram Shehzad had filed the blasphemy

case on July 1 under Section 295-C of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws, which are commonly abused to

settle personal scores. Section 295-C states that “whoever by words, either spoken or

written, or by visible representation, or by imputation, innuendo, or insinuation, directly

or indirectly, defiles the sacred name of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) shall be

punishable with death, or imprisonment for life, and shall be liable to fine.” The shooter

(or shooters) escaped.

The first woman to be sentenced to die in Pakistan for allegedly blaspheming Islam’s prophet

said she was shaken and aghast that she was never asked for a statement in her defense. In an

interview with Compass at Sheikhupura District Jail, Asia Noreen (alternatively spelled

Aaysa, and also called Asia Bibi) said through tears and a shaking voice that she was

heartbroken and shattered. The mother of two children and step-mother to three others asked a

question that no one has been able to answer for her. “How can an innocent person be accused,

have a case in court after a false FIR [First Information Report], and then be given the

death sentence, without even once taking into consideration what he or she has to say?”

Arrested on June 19, 2009, Noreen was accused of blaspheming Muhammad and defaming Islam. A

judge under pressure from area Islamists convicted her under Pakistan’s blasphemy statutes on

Nov. 8. “In the entire year that I have spent in this jail,” she told Compass, “I have not

been asked even once for my statement in court. Not by the lawyers and not by the judge.”

Noreen said the triggering incident resulted from a “planned conspiracy” to “teach her a

lesson” because villagers in Ittanwali, near Nankana Sahib about 75 kilometers (47 miles)

from Lahore, disliked her and her family. “They have been saying that I confessed to my

crime, but the fact is that I said I was sorry for any word that I may have said during the

argument that may have hurt their feelings,” she said. “What my village people have accused

me of is a complete lie.”

In spite of the trauma the blasphemy laws have visited on Pakistan’s minorities as well as on

Muslims, the U.N. General Assembly voted on Dec. 21 to pass a “Defamation of Religions”

resolution that lends international legitimacy to such laws. The resolution was adopted with

79 votes in favor, 67 votes against and 40 abstentions – the smallest level of support it has

received since it was first voted on 10 years ago.

*** Photos of Asia Noreen, as well as the bodies of Rashid and Sajid Emmanuel, are available

electronically. Contact Compass Direct News for pricing and transmittal.

2 – Christians Increasingly Targeted in Iraq
An Islamic extremist assault on a Syrian Catholic Church in Baghdad on Oct. 31, one of the

bloodiest attacks on the country’s dwindling Christian community, culminated a year of

increasing violence against Christians in Iraq. Seven or eight Islamic militants stormed into

Our Lady of Salvation church during evening mass after detonating bombs in the neighborhood,

gunning down two policemen at the stock exchange across the street, and blowing up their own

car. More than 100 people were reportedly attending mass. A militant organization called the

Islamic State of Iraq, which has links to al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, claimed responsibility for

the attack. The militants sprayed the sanctuary with bullets. Iraqi security forces launched

an assault on the church building, and it was unclear how many of the 58 deaths resulted from

the raid; the militants reportedly began killing hostages when the security force assault

began.

Political tensions ahead of parliamentary elections in Iraq on March 7 left at least eight

Chaldean Christians dead and hundreds of families fleeing Mosul. “The concern of Christians

in Mosul is growing in the face of what is happening in the city,” said Chaldean Archbishop

of Kirkuk Louis Sako. “The tension and struggle between political forces is creating an

atmosphere of chaos and congestion. Christians are victims of political tension between

political groups, but maybe also by fundamentalist sectarian cleansing.” On Feb. 23 the

killing of Eshoee Marokee, a Christian, and his two sons in their home in front of other

family members sent shock waves across the Christian community. The murder took place amid a

string of murders that triggered the mass exodus of families to the surrounding towns and

provinces. “It is not the first time Christians are attacked or killed,” said the archbishop

of the Syrian Catholic Church in Mosul, Georges Casmoussa. “The new [element] in this

question is to be killed in their own homes.”

Three Christian students were killed and 180 injured in a May 2 bomb attack on a bus outside

Mosul. The blasts targeted three buses full of Christians traveling to the University of

Mosul for classes. The convoy of buses, which brings Christian students from villages east of

Mosul, was making its daily route accompanied by two Iraqi army cars.
 
By year’s end it was estimated that only 334,000 Christians were left in Iraq, less than half

of the number in 1991.

*** Photos of the attacked Syrian Catholic Church building are available electronically.

Contact Compass Direct News for pricing and transmittal.

3 – Afghan Christian Accused of ‘Apostasy’ Faces Death Sentence
A Christian in Afghanistan facing “apostasy” charges punishable by death was still without

legal representation by year’s end after authorities blocked a foreign lawyer’s attempt to

visit him in prison, sources said. A Christian lawyer from the region who requested anonymity

travelled to Kabul on behalf of Christian legal rights organization Advocates International

in November to represent 45-year-old Said Musa (alternatively spelled Sayed Mossa).

Authorities denied him access to Musa and to his indictment file.

After several court hearing postponements, Musa appeared before a judge on Nov. 27 without

prior notice. The judge sent Musa’s case file to the attorney general’s office for

corrections, according to the lawyer. The prosecutor in charge of western Kabul, Din Mohammad

Quraishi, said two men, Musa and Ahmad Shah, were accused of conversion to another religion.

But Musa’s letters from prison and other sources indicate that Shah is a government informant

posing as a Christian. Musa and Shah appeared before the judge on Nov. 27 “shackled and

chained” to each other, according to a source who was present. Musa and the other sources

claim Shah sent images of worshipping Christians to the country’s most popular broadcaster,

Noorin TV, which aired them in May. The broadcast put in motion the events that got Musa

arrested, sources said. In early June the deputy secretary of the Afghan Parliament, Abdul

Sattar Khawasi, called for the execution of converts from Islam.

Another Afghan Christian is in prison for his faith, sources said. Shoib Assadullah, 25, was

arrested on Oct. 21 for giving a New Testament to a man who reportedly turned him in to

authorities. Assadullah is in a holding jail in a district of Mazar-e-Sharif, in northern

Afghanistan.

4 – Somali Girl Killed for Embracing Christ
In a year in which Islamic militants from the al-Qaeda-linked al Shabaab group killed more

underground Christian leaders, civilian Muslims also claimed at least one victim. A 17-year-

old girl in Somalia who converted to Christianity from Islam was shot to death on Nov. 25 in

an apparent “honor killing,” area sources said. Nurta Mohamed Farah had fled her village of

Bardher, Gedo Region to Galgadud Region to live with relatives after her parents tortured her

for leaving Islam. Area sources said they strongly suspected that the two unidentified men

who shot her in the chest and head with a pistol were relatives or acting on their behest.

She was killed in Abudwaq district about 200 meters from where she had taken refuge.

Her parents had severely beaten her for leaving Islam and regularly shackled her to a tree at

their home, Christian sources said. She had been confined to her home since May 10, when her

family found out that she had embraced Christianity, said a Christian leader who visited the

area. Area Christians had reported that while living in her home village, Farah was put in a

small, dark room at night. Her parents had taken her to a doctor who prescribed medication

for a “mental illness.” Alarmed by her determination to keep her faith, her father, Hassan

Kafi Ilmi, and mother, Hawo Godane Haf, decided she had gone crazy and forced her to take the

prescribed medication, but it had no effect in swaying her from her faith, a source said.

Traditionally, he added, many Somalis believe the Quran cures the sick, especially the

mentally ill, so the Islamic scripture was recited to her twice a week. She had declined her

family’s offer of forgiveness in exchange for renouncing Christianity, the source said. The

confinement began after the medication and punishments failed.

5 – Mass Attacks on Christians in Nigeria
Large-scale attacks on Christians – interspersed with smaller, isolated assaults that were

often more motivated by property disputes than anti-Christian sentiment – hit Nigeria in

2010. On March 7, hundreds of Christians were killed in three farming villages near Jos by

ethnic Fulani Muslims. The mostly ethnic Berom victims included many women and children

killed with machetes by rampaging Fulani herdsmen. About 75 houses were also burned. State

Information Commissioner Gregory Yenlong confirmed that about 500 persons were killed in the

attacks, which took place mainly in Dogo Nahawa, Zot and Rastat villages. The assailants

reportedly came on foot from a neighboring state; security forces had been alerted of a

possible attack on the villages but did not act beforehand. Bishop Andersen Bok, national

coordinator of the Plateau State Elders Christian Fellowship, along with group Secretary

General Musa Pam, described the attacks as yet another “jihad and provocation on Christians.”

The Christian leaders said in a statement, “Eyewitnesses say the Hausa Fulani Muslim

militants were chanting ‘Allah Akbar,’ broke into houses, cutting human beings, including

children and women, with their knives and cutlasses.”

Muslim Fulani herdsmen unleashed more horrific violence on two Christian villages in Plateau

state on March 17, killing 13 persons, including a pregnant woman and children. In attacks

presumably over disputed property but with a level of violence characteristic of jihadist

method and motive, men in military camouflage and others in customary clothing also burned 20

houses in Byei and Baten villages, in the Riyom Local Government Area of the state, about 45

kilometers (29 miles) from the state capital, Jos. The ethnic Berom Christians, who live as

farmers, have long faced off with Fulani nomads who graze their cattle on the Beroms’ land.

Because the style of killing was typical of jihadist radicals, Christian leaders suspected

Islamic extremists are encouraging the attacks, throwing religious gas on low-burning land

and ethnic conflicts. Dalyop Nyango Mandung, a survivor of the attack whose 90-year-old

mother, Ngo Hwo Dongo, was killed in her room, told newsmen that the villagers were awakened

by gunshots from the Muslim herdsmen who were barricading their houses. Mandung, however,

said the assailants were wearing military fatigues rather than the customary clothing of

Fulani herders.

Attacks from another quarter came late in the year, when the Islamic sect Boko Haram exploded

several bombs in Christian areas of Jos on Dec. 24, including one at a Catholic church, that

killed scores of people. At the same time, the group killed a Baptist pastor and five other

Christians on Christmas Eve in Maiduguri, capital of Borno state in northern Nigeria. The

Rev. Bulus Marwa and the other Christians were killed in the Dec. 24 attacks on Victory

Baptist Church in Alemderi and a Church of Christ in Nigeria (COCIN) congregation in

Sinimari. Another 25 persons were said to have been injured during the serial attacks by the

Islamic group.

The Boko Haram members reportedly first stormed the COCIN church in two vehicles and

detonated bombs that shattered the gate of the worship center and killed the security guard.

Danjuma Akawu, who survived the attack on the Baptist church, said “they hacked the two choir

members using knives and a petrol bomb before heading to the pastor’s residence, where he was

killed.” Speaking during a visit to the Baptist church on Saturday (Dec. 25), Borno Gov. Ali

Modu Sheriff noted that the attack on the Christian community was an attempt by Boko Haram to

create conflict between Christians and Muslims in the state.

*** Photos of victims of the Fulani herdsmen attacks are available electronically. Contact

Compass Direct News for pricing and transmittal.

6 – Hostilities toward Christians in Egypt Hit Boiling Point
In a year that began with a drive-by shooting after a Coptic Christmas Eve service on Jan. 6

that killed six Christians, hostilities from Egypt’s Muslim majority toward the Coptic

Christian minority reached a fever pitch as the year wore on, with weeks of protests against

Christians. Tensions grew after the wife of a Coptic priest, Camilia Zakher, disappeared in

July. According to government sources and published media reports, Zakher left her home after

a heated argument with her husband. But Coptic demonstrators, who started gathering to

protest at churches after Zakher disappeared, claimed she had been kidnapped and forced to

convert to Islam.

The next month, Egyptian media reported in error that Egypt’s State Security Intelligence had

seized a ship from Israel laden with explosives headed for the son of an official of the

Coptic Orthodox church, and rumors began that Copts were stockpiling weapons in the basements

of their churches with plans to overthrow the Muslim majority. The Front of Religious

Scholars then called for a complete boycott of Christians in Egypt. The group called

Christians “immoral,” labeled them “terrorists” and said Muslims should not patronize their

businesses or even say “hello” to them. When a group of Islamic extremists on Oct. 31 burst

into Our Lady of Salvation church in Baghdad, Iraq during evening mass and began spraying the

sanctuary with gunfire, the militant organization that took responsibility said Christians in

Egypt also would be targeted if its demands were not met. The threats against Christians

caused a flurry of activity at churches in Egypt, and security increased throughout the

country.

In the Jan. 6 shooting, three men suspected to be Muslims, including one with a criminal

record sought by police, were in a moving car from which automatic gunfire hit Coptic

Christians who had attended services at St. John’s Church in Nag Hammadi, 455 kilometers (282

miles) south of Cairo. A Muslim security guard was also killed, and nine other Coptic

Christians were wounded, with three of them in critical condition. Copts, along with many

Orthodox communities, celebrate Christmas on Jan. 7.

*** Photos of a mosque next to a Coptic church building are available electronically. Contact

Compass Direct News for pricing and transmittal.

7 – Christian Villagers in Laos Driven into Jungle
Officials and residents of Katin village in Ta Oih district, Saravan Province, on Dec. 26

destroyed rice paddies farmed by 11 Christian families previously living in the village after

the expulsion of another seven families on Dec. 23. Residents drained water from the rice

paddies, burned fencing that protected the crop from animals and stomped on new seedlings to

ensure the rice would not grow, advocacy group Human Rights Watch for Lao Religious Freedom

(HRWLRF) reported. The fields were destroyed just a few days after the Katin village chief

and other village authorities armed with guns entered the homes of another seven Christian

families, totaling 15 people, and ordered them to give up their faith. When they refused,

officials marched them out of the village and warned them not to return. Two of these

families professed faith after officials expelled 11 Christian families last January, and

another four families joined them after officials in July threatened to shoot any of the

expelled Christians who attempted to return to Katin. Yet another family professed allegiance

to Jesus Christ after officials in late October warned that the six Christian families would

be evicted in January 2011 if they held to their beliefs. The newly-expelled Christians then

sought shelter with the 11 families who were still living at the edge of the jungle despite

assurances from provincial and district officials that they had every right to remain in

Katin village. HRWLRF representatives believe district-level officials may have secretly

approved the expulsions. “Village officials don’t usually do anything without informally

consulting the district head,” a spokesman told Compass.

When village officials last January expelled the 11 families, totaling 48 people, for

refusing to give up their faith, the Christians built simple shelters at the edge of the

jungle but suffered from a lack of adequate food and water. Officials also destroyed their

houses, confiscated livestock and essential registration documents and denied their children

access to the village school. In May, village officials granted the families permission to

take rice stored in their family rice barns to ward off starvation. Shortly afterwards,

members of the 11 families returned off-season to farm their family rice paddies, adjacent to

the village, in order to preserve land rights and maintain their food supplies.

8 – Foreign Christians Suddenly Expelled from Morocco
Between March and June authorities expelled 128 foreign Christians in an effort to purge the

country of any foreign Christian influences. In April, nearly 7,000 Muslim religious leaders

backed the deportations by signing a document describing the work of Christians within

Morocco as “moral rape” and “religious terrorism.” The statement from the religious leaders

came amid a nationwide mudslinging campaign geared to vilify Christians in Morocco for

“proselytism” – widely perceived as bribing people to change their faith. In the same time

period, Moroccan authorities applied pressure on Moroccan converts to Christianity through

interrogations, searches and arrests. Christians on the ground said that, although these have

not continued, there is still a general sense that the government is increasingly intolerant

of Christian activities.

The government’s portrayal of foreign Christians created an atmosphere in which national

Christians suffered more societal harassment and discrimination. By the end of the year more

than 150 foreign Christians were deported or declared persona non grata, with police

arresting and interrogating national Christians in the search for evidence to justify the

expulsion of the expatriates.

9 – Wave of Persecution in India’s Karnataka State
A report in March found a wave of persecution had struck Karnataka state, where Christians

faced more than 1,000 attacks in 500 days. An independent investigation by a former judge of

the Karnataka High Court found that the spate began on Sept. 14, 2008, when at least 12

churches were attacked in one day in Karnataka’s Mangalore city, in Dakshina Kannada

district, and the number of attacks reached 1,000 in January 2010. “On Jan. 26 – the day we

celebrated India’s Republic Day – Karnataka’s 1,000th attack took place in Mysore city,” said

Justice Michael Saldanha, former judge of the Karnataka High Court. Saldanha told Compass the

figure was based on reports from faith-based organizations. Blaming the state government for

the attacks, Saldanha said the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had

“outdone Orissa.” The wave of persecution in Karnataka began as fallout of the anti-Christian

mayhem in eastern Orissa state, where Maoists killed a Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader on Aug.

23, 2008, with Hindu extremists wrongly accusing Christians. The attacks in Orissa’s

Kandhamal district, the epicenter of the bloodbath, killed more than 100 people and burned

4,640 houses, 252 churches and 13 educational institutions.

Karnataka Home Minister V.S. Acharya denied the results of the inquiry. “The allegation of

Karnataka having faced 1,000 attacks is absolutely false,” Acharya told Compass. “Karnataka

is the most peaceful state in India, and the people are law-abiding.” But the stream of

reports of violence against Christians in Karnataka continued throughout the year. In

addition to the attacks, numerous Christians also have faced false charges of fraudulent or

forced conversions throughout Karnataka. “I have been to many police stations where

complaints of [forced] conversions have been lodged against Christians, and when I asked the

police why they were acting on frivolous complaints, most of them told me that they had

orders from above,” Saldanha said. In his report, he notes that Christians “are dragged to

the police station under false allegations, immediately locked up, beaten up and denied bail

by the lower judiciary, which functions as the loyal partner of the police department and

refuses bail on the grounds that ‘the police have objected.’” The report says 468 Christian

workers in rural areas had been targeted with such actions since September 2008. “Numerous

others have been threatened and beaten up,” the report states. “The police are totally out of

control, with the lower judiciary having abdicated its constitutional obligation of

safeguarding the citizens’ rights, particularly from a tyrannical state machinery, while the

state government proclaims that everything is peaceful.”

Chief Minister Bookanakere Siddalingappa Yeddyurappa and Home Minister Acharya belong to the

Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (Hindu nationalist conglomerate or the RSS), believed to be the

parent organization of the BJP, Saldanha pointed out. He also said that although the attacks

on Christians had turned public sentiment against the BJP in Karnataka, the party seemed to

care little as both opposition parties, the Congress Party and the regional Janata Dal-

Secular (JD-S) party, were “in shambles” in the state.

In May 2009 the BJP lost national elections, and since then sections of the party are in

desperation, he said, adding, “Perhaps this is one of the reasons why attacks continue to

happen in Karnataka.” The BJP came to sole power in Karnataka in May 2008. Prior to that, it

ruled in alliance with the JD-S party for 20 months. There are a little more than 1 million

Christians in Karnataka, where the total population is over 52 million.

10 – China Releases Gao Zhisheng – and then Seizes Him Again
Christian human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, captured in February 2009 and released by Chinese

officials on April 6, 2010, went missing again on April 20. Bob Fu of the China Aid

Association (CAA) said Gao went back into the hands of Chinese security forces. Gao,

initially seized from his home in Shaanxi Province on Feb. 4, 2009 and held incommunicado by

security officials for 13 months, was permitted to phone family members and colleagues in

late March before officials finally returned him to his Beijing apartment on April 6. Gao had

told a reporter from the South China Morning Post (SCMP) that he expected to travel to Urumqi

within days of his release to visit his in-laws, and witnesses saw him leaving his apartment

sometime between April 9 and 12, SCMP reported on April 30. Gao’s father-in-law reportedly

confirmed that Gao arrived at his home with an escort of four police officers but spent just

one night there before police took him away again. Gao phoned his father-in-law shortly

before he was due to board a flight back to Beijing on April 20. He promised to call again

after returning home but failed to do so, according to the SCMP report. Fu said he believes

international pressure forced authorities to allow Gao a brief re-appearance to prove that he

was alive before seizing him again to prevent information leaking out about his experiences

over the past year.

During a previous detention in 2007, Gao’s captors brutally tortured him and threatened him

with death if he spoke about his treatment. Gao later described the torture in an open letter

published by CAA in 2009. He had come to the attention of authorities when he began to

investigate the persecution of house church Christians and Falun Gong members. In 2005 he

wrote a series of open letters to President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao accusing the

government of torturing Falun Gong members. When the letters appeared, authorities revoked

Gao’s law license and shut down his law firm, sources told CAA. He was given a suspended

three-year jail sentence in December 2006, following a confession that Gao later claimed was

made under extreme duress, including torture and threats against his wife and children. Gao

was then confined to his Beijing apartment under constant surveillance – forbidden to leave

his home, use his phone or computer or otherwise communicate with the outside world,

according to a report by The New York Times. A self-taught lawyer and a Communist Party

member until 2005, Gao was once recognized by the Ministry of Justice as one of the

mainland’s top 10 lawyers for his pro bono work on human rights cases, according to SCMP.