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Page 19 - சர்வதேச கிறிஸ்துவர் அக்கறை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Worthy News | BosNewsLife

by Karen Faulkner, Worthy News Correspondent (Worthy News) – The International Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law (Intersociety) has published a report attesting that Fulani Jihadists and Boko Haram terrorists have already murdered some 3,462 Christians in Nigeria this year, International Christian Concern reports. Nigeria is a “killing field” of Christians, and is headed toward Christian genocide, the Commission on International Religious Freedom said in its 2021 annual report, Intersociety asserts in its report that: “The Jihadist Fulani Herdsmen are responsible for the majority of the killings with at least 1,909 Christian deaths in 200 days, followed by Boko Haram, ISWAP and Muslim Fulani Bandits who jointly killed 1,063 Christians. Moreover, members of the Nigerian army and police force carried out around 490 of the overall killings, the report said.

Kukah versus FG: Letting the data speak, By Justine John Dyikuk

Kukah versus FG: Letting the data speak, By Justine John Dyikuk To be fair to him, Bishop Kukah was being modest by not inciting the public with grim figures. ADVERTISEMENT Is the Presidency aware of the report by Open Doors that Christians killed in Nigeria in 2020 as a result of Islamic violence increased by 60 per cent? And that the report also indicated that “more than 2,200 of 4,761 Christians killed around the world in 2020 died in Nigeria because of radical Islamists”?… So, to be fair to him, Bishop Kukah was being modest by not inciting the public with grim figures. Reactions have been trailing Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah’s July 14 virtual presentation at the Tom Lantos Human Rights’ Commission, Washington D.C. on the persecution of Christians in Nigeria. During his speech, he also unraveled issues around religious nepotism. In an attempt to analyse the points of divergence between Kukah and the Federal Government (FG), it is crucial to note that the Bishop was

Despite Genocide, Armenian Couple Finds New Life

By Martin Hopman – “I am one of the thousands of people who have suffered from the war in Syria. Even if I am now out of the fire, I still suffer. My grandfather and my grandmother were survivors of the Armenian Genocide. Each generation since has suffered in different ways: my family and I suffered in Aleppo for a long time. I bear the lack of food, water, electricity, and the responsibilities of my aged parents (they were as my kids).” Born into a Syrian-Armenian family who has been on the run since the turn of the 19 th century, Ani is accustomed to the severe persecution perpetrated on Christians. Growing up in Aleppo, she was living with aging parents in the city when ISIS began its assault and takeover. Already used to discrimination, Ani and her fellow Christians were now exposed to a reign of constant terror as they were targeted everywhere from home to the workplace.

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