Radio Free China
News from China & asia with a focus on human rights and religious liberty.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
- Edmund Burke

Wednesday, March 31, 2004

`Never again'? The world yawns as genocide continues in Sudan [mercurynews.com]
6:21:25 PM    

Sudan: humanitarian crisis in Darfur deteriorating, UN agencies say. United Nations Mar 31 2004 0:18AM GMT [Moreover - Human rights news]
9:24:37 AM    

Defector returned to N Korea. A man who leaked evidence North Korea tested chemical weapons on prisoners turns up back in Pyongyang. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]
9:20:08 AM    

EGYPT TO HOST SUMMIT AMID CONCERN ABOUT PERSECUTION OF CHRISTIAN GIRLS
Meeting unlikely to tackle international concern over human rights violations
[ANS]


excerpt:

As part of the latest campaign by Muslim extremists against Christians, the U.S. Copts Association claims it has received "troubling reports (that) indicate that supermarkets publicizing shopping contests are in fact singling out Coptic girls for conversion to Islam.

CONTROVERSIAL PAPERWORK

Once alerted to the girls religion, store employees notify the young Christian woman that she has won a contest. To claim her prize, she is asked to proceed to the upper levels of the store where her reward awaits. Once upstairs, the girl is asked to sign documentation confirming receipt of her reward," the organization said in a statement to ASSIST News Service (ANS).

"However, the paperwork is documentation for the conversion of an individual to Islam; and the young girl is unaware that her signature is in fact official confirmation of her conversion to Islam," it added.

Coptic women who resist are reportedly accused of theft and strip-searched. "There are several reports of the rape of these young Christian women. Despite their families desperate attempts to rescue their daughters, the girls are not returned to their families," the U.S. Copts Association said. [full story]

 


9:08:16 AM    

CHINA: For religious freedom, patience may be the virtue

By Magda Hornemann, Forum 18 News Service

As China's National People's Congress passed constitutional amendments addressing the issue of human rights, outside the congress doors the secret police was crushing possible dissent. Religious believers, including a Catholic bishop and a Protestant house church leader, were among those detained. Two other Protestants who researched the 2003 crackdown on unofficial churches in Hanzhou had just been indicted, while hundreds of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners, thousands of Protestants and many Vatican-loyal Catholics and other believers languish in prisons and labour camps. Communist ideological opposition to religion remains strong, despite attempts to couch it in milder terms, combined with fears – rooted in Chinese history – of foreign religious involvement. The Party also fears rival organisations with the power to mobilise adherents. Few believers expect anything more than incremental improvements. [read more...]


8:59:43 AM    

Tashkent Still Angry, Fearful Over Bombs. In this city whose mosques bespeak its faith and crumbling tenement blocks are monuments to its Soviet past, puddles of blood-tinged water tell the latest chapter of Tashkent's history. [Associated Press headlines via GoUpstate.com]
8:57:17 AM    

US: Opposition Must Participate in Burma Democracy Conference (with audio) [VOANews.com Headlines]
8:32:33 AM    





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Last Update: 4/4/2004; 9:16:10 AM

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