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In Nicaragua, political prisoners pray for a free country

October 8, 2018 CNA Daily News 0

Managua, Nicaragua, Oct 8, 2018 / 02:31 pm (ACI Prensa).- A video circulating in Spanish-language social media shows a group of political prisoners praying the Hail Mary while expressing their desire to see a free Nicaragua.

The country has seen widespead protests since April against the government of Daniel Ortega.

“Freedom for all political prisoners. Nicaragua wants freedom. I love the blue and white flag (of my country) and my constitutional rights to demonstrate have been violated. I love you Nicaragua. Be strong, I love you all, we love you all very much, Nicaragua,” says one of the prisoners after praying the Hail Mary.

“I greet all our relatives and friends. We really love you. We don’t want any more abuse of power. May justice be done, but truly so, which is guided by the Lord, not like what we have been getting lately,” he continues.

“Nicaragua wants freedom, it wants strength, it wants genuine peace. A true peace, like we citizens who love it. Long live free Nicaragua!” he concludes.

“I’ll see you free Nicaragua! I’m going to see you free one day,” says another one of the prisoners in the video.

Javier Espinoza, a sound engineer who was imprisoned and who is now free, related recently that the political prisoners in the El Chipote prison in Nicaragua are praying to have peace and strength.

“After they eat, they cry out from their cells “Let’s pray,” said Espinoza speaking to Canal 10.

“You feel like you’re in a church. It sounds so beautiful and gives you so much peace, in that loneliness, in that darkness, to be sitting there responding to the prayer, because it’s the only thing you’ve got left. They pray the Rosary, the Hail Mary. After the prayer some Christian hymns are sung. You feel you’re closer to God because of the conditions you’re in. Do you know what they say? and they shout it out, this is nothing compared to what our Jesus went through,” the soundman said.

Protests against president Daniel Ortega which began April 18 have resulted in more than 300 deaths, according to local human rights groups.  According to the Nicaraguan Association for Human Rights,  there may be as many as 1,300 disappeared persons.

The country’s bishops have mediated on-again, off-again peace talks between the government and opposition groups.

Nicaragua’s crisis began after Ortega announced social security and pension reforms. The changes were soon abandoned in the face of widespread, vocal opposition, but protests only intensified after more than 40 protestors were killed by security forces initially.

Anti-government protesters have been attacked by “combined forces” made up of regular police, riot police, paramilitaries, and pro-government vigilantes.

The Nicaraguan government has suggested that protestors are killing their own supporters so as to destabilize Ortega’s administration.

The Church in Nicaragua was quick to acknowledge the protestors’ complaints.

The pension reforms which triggered the unrest were modest, but protests quickly turned to Ortega’s authoritarian bent.

Ortega has been president of Nicaragua since 2007, and oversaw the abolition of presidential term limits in 2014.

The Church has suggested that elections, which are not scheduled until 2021, be held in 2019, but Ortega has ruled this out.

Ortega was a leader in the Sandinista National Liberation Front, which had ousted the Somoza dictatorship in 1979 and fought US-backed right-wing counterrevolutionaries during the 1980s. Ortega was also leader of Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990.

 

This article was originally published by our sister agency, ACI Prensa. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

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News Briefs

Pakistani Supreme Court reserves judgement on Asia Bibi blasphemy case

October 8, 2018 CNA Daily News 0

Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct 8, 2018 / 01:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pakistan’s Supreme Court has reserved judgement on the verdict of Asia Bibi, a Roman Catholic woman who was sentenced to death for blasphemy, several Pakistani news sources reported on Monday.

The three-judge bench who was assembled to hear Bibi’s final appeal of her 2010 conviction declined to announce their decision on the verdict, and it is unknown when they will do so.

The reasons for the delay were not immediately made clear.

In 2009, Bibi was accused of making disparaging remarks about the Islamic prophet Muhammad after an argument stemming from a cup of water. Bibi was harvesting berries with other farm workers when she was asked to get water from a well.

Another person saw her drinking water from a cup that had previously been used by Muslims, and informed Bibi that it was not proper for a Christian to use that cup, as she was unclean. An argument ensued, and Bibi was reported to a Muslim cleric five days later for her supposed blasphemy. Bibi and her family were the only Christians in the area, and had faced pressure to convert to Islam.

She was convicted of blasphemy in 2010, and was sentenced to death by hanging. She immediately appealed. The Lahore High Court upheld conviction in 2014, which she then appealed to the country’s Supreme Court. The Supreme Court agreed to hear her appeal in 2015.

Since her arrest, Bibi has garnered international support from numerous world leaders calling for her immediate release, including Benedict XVI and Pope Francis. In 2015, Pope Francis met with her daughter and offered prayers.

In Pakistan, Islamic hardliners have been calling for her execution since her initial conviction. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan said that he supports the country’s harsh blasphemy laws.

If her appeal fails, Bibi would become the first person in Pakistan to be executed for blasphemy. In Pakistan, the crime of defaming Muhammad carries a mandatory death sentence.

Pakistan’s blasphemy laws impose strict punishment on those who desecrate the Quran or who defame or insult Muhammad. Pakistan’s state religion is Islam, and around 97 percent of the population is Muslim.

Although the government has never executed a person under the blasphemy law, accusations alone have inspired mob and vigilante violence.

Blasphemy laws are reportedly used to settle scores or to persecute religious minorities; while non-Muslims constitute only 3 percent of the Pakistani population, 14 percent of blasphemy cases have been levied against them.

Many of those accused of blasphemy are murdered, and advocates of changing the law are also targeted by violence.

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News Briefs

Pakistani scrutiny for multiple NGOs could close Catholic Relief Services

October 8, 2018 CNA Daily News 0

Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct 8, 2018 / 11:09 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Catholic Relief Services is among the 18 international organizations ordered closed by Pakistan’s new government without explanation. The move follows allegations related to the U.S. government’s pursuit of Osama bin Laden, in which a doctor’s false vaccination campaign claimed to be linked to the NGO Save the Children.

Most of the groups under the order are U.S.-based, with the rest from the U.K. and the European Union, the Associated Press reported Oct. 5.

World Vision and International Relief and Development are among the other U.S. groups affected, while the U.K.-based ActionAid and the Denmark-based Danish Relief Council are also under orders to close, the Associated Press reports. According to the Pakistani newspaper The Nation, the Pakistani branch of George Soros’ Open Society Foundations is among the organizations.

Pakistan’s Interior Ministry issued the order. The organizations have 60 days to end operations in Pakistan.

Catholic Relief Services declined comment on the matter.

Beginning in 2015, the Interior Ministry required stricter and more detailed online registration application for NGOs. The move was prompted by fears that some NGOs were using their charitable status to spy on Pakistan – and one observer said it is connected to the U.S. government’s hunt for bin Laden.

Muhammad Amir Rana, director of the Islamabad-based Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies, told the AP that ahead of the 2011 U.S. Navy Seal operation that killed bin Laden in Pakistan, a Pakistani doctor used a fake vaccination scam to attempt to identify the al-Qaeda leader’s home using DNA acquired from his relatives.

The Pakistani doctor, Shakil Afridi, said he was working for the NGO Save the Children to gain access to the bin Laden compound.

According to Reuters, he had been recruited by the CIA to help find bin Laden. He has been in jail since 2011.

Save the Children has denied any links to the CIA, and said the doctor’s claimed link with the NGO was false, but its non-Pakistani staff were forced to leave the country, Agence France Presse reports.

In 2012 the NGO’s then-country representative David Wright charged that intelligence agencies had broken international law and put at risk the safety of aid groups around the world.

“The blame lies squarely with the CIA which use humanitarian work for intelligence gathering or worse,” he said, according to the U.K. newspaper The Telegraph. “If it continues then we won’t be able to do our jobs at all in 10 years’ time.”

Rana said that Pakistan, including its intelligence agency, also views many international aid organizations as advocates of “liberal, secular voices.”

In December 2017 Pakistan’s previous government ordered 10 other foreign-funded aid groups to close, including the Pakistani branch of the Open Society Foundations. That order was not enforced in time.

The U.K.-based Plan International also faces a denied registration. The NGO focuses on education and child rights and often partners with the government on water and sanitation projects and disaster management.

Imran Yusuf Shami, Plan International’s country director, said the NGO employs dozens of people, all of whom are Pakistani, and aids tens of thousands of the poorest people in the country.

Shami said the NGO closures will affect hundreds of thousands of people.

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The Dispatch

“Columbus Is Ours”

October 8, 2018 Jerry Salyer 9

In Quarto Abeunte Saeculo, Pope Leo XIII shows us why the voyage of Christopher Columbus stands in a class by itself. There is simply no way of comparing the Genoan’s landfall in the Americas with […]