"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label missionaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missionaries. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2024

Haiti - Two Massacres in godless country run by criminal gangs and murderers

 

Haitian bus passengers shot to death:

“They were heading home from work or school”


At least four passengers were killed and many more injured when a bus carrying people home from work and school came under a volley of gunfire in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital, on May 7. The shooters remain unknown, though there is some indication that the gunfire came from an armored police vehicle. This tragedy is reflective of the level of insecurity in the Haitian capital, where simply getting on a bus to go to work or school can mean risking your life. 



Several grisly videos showing the aftermath of an attack on a bus in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on May 7 have been circulating on social media. Due to the graphic nature of these videos, our team decided to only include a number of screengrabs. In these images, you see four people who seem to have been killed by the gunfire, as well as several people with injuries, including a woman sustained serious injuries to her left leg. You can see blood on the seats, floor and ceiling of the bus. 

"The victims were innocent civilians”

Petrus Lerice is the spokesperson for an organisation called the Association of Haitian Owners and Drivers (APCH). He told our team that the bus left the town centre in Port-au-Prince and was traveling towards Carrefour, a community located to the southwest of the capital, when it came under attack near the Silvio Cator stadium. Lerice said that after the bus came under fire, the driver managed to drive it to the OMEGA police station in Carrefour. 

There were at least four passengers killed – three men, including a student, and a woman – as well as a number of people who were seriously injured. Someone told me that another person died of their injuries, but I haven’t been able to verify that. Some of the injured students were picked up by their parents, others were taken directly to the hospital… so we are still not sure about the number of victims. These people were hit with high calibre bullets, even though they were innocent civilians, who were going home after work or school. 

We don’t know who fired on the bus. The gangs accuse the police but there are also rumors blaming the gangs. I also don’t know why the bus was targeted. What is certain is that there was both an armored police vehicle and gang members at the location where the shooting occurred. Moreover, there was no gunfire or detonations until the bus came under attack, so it wasn’t like there were clashes going on between the police and the gangs ahead of time.

Dans cette vidéo, tournée dans le bus attaqué à Port-au-Prince le 7 mai 2024, des passagers enjambent les blessés pour en sortir.
Dans ce

There are a number of indications that the gunfire came from the armored police vehicle, though it is impossible to confirm who was inside of it. 

"It’s not always police in the armored vehicles because gangs have stolen them from the police,” Lerice says. 

A video filmed by a passenger shows that the bus driver was able to keep driving the bus, even after it came under fire and was filled with dead and injured people. 

“Armored vehicle fired on…” the person filming says. He then calls to the driver, telling him to hurry in order to get the injured to the hospital. Later, he tells the driver that he’s taken a dangerous road. 

“Driver! Don’t you see that other drivers are avoiding this road? The passengers told you not to take it!” 

Another video shows the bus stopped. It is empty, except for the bodies left inside. 

“A yellow bus stopped in Fontamara with four dead,” the person filming says.

"If the driver is to be believed,” he adds. “It’s an armoured vehicle that opened fire on the bus [...]. You live in a country where you are in equally as much danger from the police as from criminals."

"The driver said that armed men told him that he needed to pay them to leave safely” 

Our team spoke to a man we are calling Widmy in order to protect his identity. He went to the OMEGA police station and heard the story firsthand: 

I went and spoke to the driver there. He was in shock, but he said that he had been picking up passengers at a stop near the stadium when four armed men told him that he needed to pay them to leave safely. If not, the bus would be burned. 

The driver then said that a small police armored vehicle saw the armed men and opened fire. The armed men took shelter behind the bus and then fired back. Apparently, one of the armed men and two passersby were also killed. 

Increasingly, gangs are forcing drivers - especially bus drivers - to pay to pass, especially on the highway to the southwest of Port-au-Prince. It’s dangerous to refuse them. 

“There are around eleven toll stations in this area, including five in Mariani,” said our source. He said that the gangs want to put in another toll station near the place where the bus came under attack. 

Lerice, for his part, agreed that there has been a rise in illegal tolls, as well as an increase in the amount of money the gangs ask bus drivers to pay. 

"Before, they were asking for 1,500 gourdes [around 10 euros] at the toll station in Martissant, nears Fontamara. In the past year, they’ve been demanding 4,000 gourdes [around 27 euros]."

The Haitian police have not released a statement about the bus attack on May 7. Our team contacted them, but they did not respond. Haitian news agency AlterPresse said that they had not received a response from the police spokesperson either. 

However, an anonymous “police source” did speak to Haitian media outlet Juno7. This source said that the bus had not been specifically targeted. He said that the passengers killed and injured on the bus were essentially the collateral damage of the exchange of fire between police, inside the armored vehicle, and the armed individuals who this source claimed went into the bus. 

According to this source, “the bus was taken over by heavily armed individuals who exchanged fire with the police”. The source further added that the armed men planned to use the bus “as cover to get back to their base”.  

This video, published the night of May 7, 2024, shows eight bullet holes on the bus that came under attack in Port-au-Prince. “These are bullet holes, they are in a line. This is the work of a professional. This is not an amateur. This was a shooting planned, planned by the police,” says the commentator. The French caption on the video explains that a bus traveling between Port-au-Prince and Carrefour was attacked by armed men and that four people were killed and numerous injured, according to Mehu Changeux, the president of the association of drivers and owners.

"Gang members sometimes stop buses to search the passengers”

This attack highlights just how dangerous it can be for Haitians who are simply trying to get between Port-au-Prince and its suburbs, especially by bus, says Lerice:

Bus passengers are regularly killed. Sometimes they are outright murdered. Other times, they are killed by stray bullets. When that happens, there are often police and armed gangs nearby, so we don’t always know where the gunfire originated. That said, in theory, when there are clashes between the police and gangs, bus drivers stop and wait before driving off. 

There are always gang members in the streets, with weapons. Sometimes, they stop the bus to search passengers and goods, to check if there are weapons on board. 

They will also look at people’s texts. Depending on what they see, they might accuse them of being “informants” or “intelligence” or even police. They can kill someone on the spot for that. 

There are also kidnappings on the roads. They are so common that we barely speak of them anymore. 

Gangs aren’t the only road dangers that travelers in Haiti encounter. The roads are also in poor shape, as are the buses, and these both cause frequent accidents. 





Young American couple doing missionary work

are killed by gangs in Haiti



David Lloyd and his wife, Natalie, the daughter of Missouri state Rep. Ben Baker, and a third member of their missionary group were fatally shot in the attack.




An Oklahoma-based missionary group working in Haiti’s capital was attacked by gangs Thursday night, leaving the daughter of a Missouri state representative, her husband and a third member of the group dead, a founder of the organization said.

David Lloyd III and his wife, Natalie, who were full-time missionaries, were attacked by gangs and killed Thursday evening, Lloyd’s mother said in an interview Friday.

Alicia Lloyd, who founded Missions in Haiti in 2000 with her husband, David Lloyd, confirmed the deaths of their son, David Lloyd III, 23, known as Davy, and his wife, Natalie Lloyd, 21. Natalie Lloyd is the daughter of Missouri state Rep. Ben Baker, who also announced the couple’s death in a statement on his Facebook page.

The identity of the third person killed was not immediately known.

Alicia Lloyd said her son was crying and scared for his life when he called her to tell her that he and their compound were under attack. 

“He had already sustained a beating at the hands of a gang and they had come into the compound,” she said in the interview. 

The gang members then took the organization’s vehicles and other items and left, she said.

After they beat her son, Alicia Lloyd said, he was released and neighbors came to check on him. But then things took a turn after a second gang showed up, she said. 

“And that’s when he and his wife and one of our Haitian employees that have been with us for 20 years” were holed up in one of the organization’s small houses for two to three hours, she said.

“Now this gang went into full attack mode,” the organization said in a post on its Facebook page before the three had been killed.

The couple and the other longtime member of the organization used a satellite internet link to make calls and recount what was happening as it was occurring, the organization’s Facebook post said.  

The post went on to say that the gangs had shot all the windows out of the house and attempts to get a police armored car to evacuate the missionaries to safety were unsuccessful. The organization said it had tried to negotiate with the gang and offer them money to let the three go but concluded the post by saying it had lost communications.  

In a separate statement on its Facebook page posted just hours later, the organization announced that the three had been killed at about 9 p.m.

Alicia Lloyd said the gang members had set the house on fire, broke down the door to the home and shot the Lloyds and the other longtime employee.

Haiti has been in turmoil for decades and is increasingly under the control of gangs, which have taken over most of the capital city of Port-au-Prince, including police stations. Gang violence reached unprecedented levels after the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse. The first quarter of 2024 was the country’s deadliest, with 2,500 or so people killed or injured in gang violence, the United Nations has said. Haiti’s main international airport —Toussaint-Louverture airport in Port-au-Prince — reopened Monday for the first time in nearly three months after gang violence forced authorities to close it in early March.

A spokesperson for the National Security Council said it was aware of the reports of the deaths of U.S. citizens in Haiti and that President Joe Biden supports multinational efforts to stabilize the country and protect its people.

“Our hearts go out to the families of those killed as they experience unimaginable grief,” the spokesperson said.

Alicia Lloyd said that until recently, no one was able to leave the compound because all the roads around it were blocked and that Missions in Haiti would have to smuggle in supplies for its children’s home.

Still, she said, she was in shock and disbelief Friday. She was in Haiti at the time of the attack, and her husband had just left a day earlier to return to the U.S., she said.

David Lloyd III grew up in Haiti and loved its people, his mother said. At age 18, he went to the U.S. to attend a Bible college, she said, and returned to Haiti after graduating to serve the people there.

“It’s sad for me to say, but he died doing what he loved because he just wanted to help the Haitian people,” she said. “Because growing up there, he saw their suffering. He saw the misery there, and he just wanted to do something to make a difference.”

Alicia Lloyd remembered her daughter-in-law as having a “real sweet spirit.”

“She just was such a blessing to our family,” she said. “She just was one of those people that would just get in and do whatever needed to be done.”

Baker said he taught David Lloyd III at Ozark Bible Institute and College in Missouri before Natalie had shown an interest in him. Baker also graduated from the Pentecostal school, where he was once the dean of students.

“He always had a heart for Haiti,” Baker said in an interview Friday.

David Lloyd III had made clear to Natalie when they were dating that he felt a “calling” to return to the country after attending the university, he said.

Baker said he and his wife advised Natalie to visit Haiti before she and David got married and decided to move there, which she did.

“Obviously, they worked that out and they realized they were meant to be together,” he said.

They married in June 2022 and moved to Haiti that fall. The Bakers last saw their daughter and son-in-law in January when they came to the U.S. for a family wedding.

Even as conditions worsened there, including in the last few months when they had no way out, they chose to stay because they didn’t want to leave the children they had been caring for who would have had nowhere to go, Baker said.

“We supported that, as hard as it was for us,” Baker said. “We supported that decision.”

Missions in Haiti had managed to befriend some of the gang members, who believed the missionaries were there for the right reasons and knew they were doing good for the people, Baker said.

“It’s a corrupt country,” he said. “So they had to just learn to exist in that system.”

He learned of the attack as it was unfolding and said he felt helpless that he could not intervene as a dad and protect them, especially his daughter whom he described as an unbelievably sweet human being who loved kids.

“I don’t feel resentment toward the people,” he said. “I still want people to be reached there in Haiti.”

“The bottom line is, I know they gave their lives,” he added. “They put themselves above others.”

===============================================================================


Wednesday, March 15, 2017

China Arrests Christian Missionaries for North Korea Activities - Update

UPDATE - Please watch a 6 minute video at the bottom of this page. It's quite extraordinary!

By Elizabeth Shim  

Chinese police have detained two South Korean pastors who have been assisting North Korean refugees in the country, according to a South Korea-based activist. File Photo by Stephen Shaver/UPI | License Photo

(UPI) -- Chinese authorities have detained two South Korean Christian pastors who were assisting North Korean refugees.

The arrests come at a time when Beijing has not stopped placing selective sanctions against South Korean companies for a joint U.S.-South Korea decision to deploy the missile defense system THAAD on the peninsula.

Pastor Peter Jung, who heads Justice for North Korea in Seoul, told Yonhap news agency Wednesday the two South Korean nationals were "protecting defectors" but were tracked down by Chinese police who promptly arrested the religious clerics and their families.

Jung said one of the pastors was arrested Feb. 18 in the Chinese city of Qingdao in Shandong province, at the city's airport, with his wife and two children.


The second South Korean national was arrested with his wife at a hotel in Qinhuangdao, a Chinese port city in northeastern Hebei province.

Chinese authorities released the family members of both men after two days of interrogation, Jung said.

"The arrested pastors openly stated to Chinese authorities they were helping North Korean defectors out of fear they would be subject to inhumane treatment if repatriated to the North," Jung said.



Beijing has previously sent back North Korean refugees within China's borders.

Jung said Chinese police are seeking to charge the South Koreans for operating a human smuggling operation.

The two pastors have been transferred to the Chinese city of Benxi in Liaoning Province, where they are to await a final decision while in custody.


In February, Chinese authorities arrested four Christian missionaries near the North Korea border.

Chinese authorities have detained Christian missionaries, including one American, in an area near the North Korea border. (UPI Photo/Stephen Shaver) | License Photo

Feb. 10 (UPI) -- Chinese authorities recently arrested four Christian missionaries near the North Korea border, but reasons for their arrest were not provided.

A local resident in Yanji, a city in the Yanbian region of Jilin Province, said the arrests were made at a hotel in the town on Thursday, Radio Free Asia reported.

All four missionaries appear to be of Korean descent, but carried different passports.

One missionary identified as Pastor Park Won-cheol is a man in his fifties.

A U.S. citizen, Park's whereabouts are being confirmed by the U.S. embassy in China, the source said.

Other missionaries include a South Korea passport holder with the surname Kim. The man is in his thirties. 

Two Chinese nationals were also detained.

Park, the American, had been traveling frequently to China "for years," the source said.

"Park flew to China from South Korea last week," said the source. "On Feb. 9, at 10:30 a.m., immediately before he was to travel to Yanji airport to board a plane to return to South Korea, he was arrested at his hotel after a raid."


Chinese missionary sentenced to 15 years in NK, another killed

A second source told RFA one missionary of Chinese nationality was sentenced to 15 years in a North Korea prison, after being kidnapped by Pyongyang's state security agents on Nov. 1, 2014.

North Korean agents who crossed the border killed another Chinese citizen, Han Chungryeol, on April 30, 2016, while he was aiding North Korean refugees, the source said.

Yanji, China

Please watch this extraordinary testimony of what life was like in North Korea and the the cost of escaping to a young girl and her mother.

https://www.facebook.com/HigherPerspective/videos/1513754778656836/

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Christianity - Martyrdom, Forgiveness, Courage

16 years ago, an Australian missionary called Graham Staines and his two young boys were brutally burnt to death in an attack that shocked India. But what shocked us more than the gruesome murders was the love and forgiveness of Gladys Staines, Graham's wife, who continued to serve lepers in the area for years. Here's an interview she gave more than decade ago. 

Wikipedia - Graham Stuart Staines (1941 – 23 January 1999) was an Australian Christian missionary who, along with his two sons Philip (aged 10) and Timothy (aged 6), was burnt to death by a gang while sleeping in his station wagon at Manoharpur village in Keonjhar district in Odisha, India on 23 January 1999. In 2003, a Bajrang Dal activist, Dara Singh, was convicted of leading the gang that murdered Graham Staines and his sons, and was sentenced to life in prison.

The Bajrang Dal is the youth wing of a militant fundamentalist Hindu organisation.

He had been working in Odisha among the tribal poor and lepers since 1965. Some Hindu groups alleged that Staines had forcibly converted or lured many Hindus into Christianity; Staines' widow Gladys denied these allegations. She continued to live in India caring for leprosy patients until she returned to Australia in 2004. 

In 2005 she was awarded the fourth highest civilian honor in India, Padma Shree, in recognition for her work with leprosy patients in Odisha. 

In 2016, she received the Mother Teresa Memorial International Award for Social Justice.


Graham met Gladys June in 1981 while working for leprosy patients, and they married in 1983 and had worked together since then. They had three children, a daughter (Esther) and two sons (Philip and Timothy). 

Staines assisted in translating a part of the Bible into the Ho language of India, including proofreading the entire New Testament manuscript, though his focus was on a ministry to lepers. He reportedly spoke fluent Odia and was popular among the patients whom he used to help after they were cured. He used to teach how to make mats out of rope and basket from Sabi grass and trees leaves.

Death and reaction
Graham Staines - Dara Singh
On the night of 22 January 1999, he attended a jungle camp in Manoharpur, an annual gathering of Christians of the area for religious and social discourse. The village is situated on the border of the tribal-dominated Mayurbhanj and Keonjhar districts of Odisha. He was on his way to Keonjhar with his sons, who had come back on holiday from their school at Ooty. They broke the journey for the camp and decided to spend the night in Manoharpur. After that, they slept in the vehicle because of the severe cold. His wife and daughter had remained in Baripada.

According to reports, a mob of about 50 people, armed with axes and other implements, attacked the vehicle while Staines and the children were fast asleep and his station wagon where he was sleeping was set alight by the mob. Graham, Philip and Timothy Staines were burnt alive. Staines and his sons apparently tried to escape, but were allegedly prevented by a mob.

The murders were widely condemned by religious and civic leaders, politicians, and journalists. The US-based Human Rights Watch accused the then Indian Government of failing to prevent violence against Christians, and of exploiting sectarian tensions for political ends. The organisation said attacks against Christians increased "significantly" since the "Hindu Nationalist" BJP came to power. 

Then-Prime Minister of India, Atal Behari Vajpayee, a leader of BJP, condemned the "ghastly attack" and called for swift action to catch the killers. Published reports stated that church leaders alleged the attacks were carried out at the behest of hardline Hindu organisations. Hindu hardliners accused Christian missionaries of forcibly converting poor and low-caste Hindus and tribals. The convicted killer Dara Singh was treated as a hero by hardline Hindus and reportedly protected by some villagers. In an interview with the Hindustan Times, one of the accused killers, Mahendra Hembram, stated that the killers "were provoked by the "corruption of tribal culture" by the missionaries, who they claimed fed villagers beef and gave women brassieres and sanitary towels."


In her affidavit before the Commission on the death of her husband and two sons, Gladys Staines stated:

"The Lord God is always with me to guide me and help me to try to accomplish the work of Graham, but I sometimes wonder why Graham was killed and also what made his assassins behave in such a brutal manner on the night of 22nd/23rd January 1999. It is far from my mind to punish the persons who were responsible for the death of my husband Graham and my two children. But it is my desire and hope that they would repent and would be reformed."

Singh was sentenced to death, but the Odisha High Court commuted that to a life sentence. India's Supreme Court upheld the commuted sentence in a statement that was clearly somewhat sympathetic to the cause of the murderer. They claimed they were trying to teach Staines a lesson, but preventing them from escaping the burning car made it pretty obvious there was no intent to do anything but murder.

While claiming that the government of India is secular, the Supreme Court condemned conversion in a statement it later withdrew.

The Modi government is currently under pressure to act in ways that are definitely not secular but are very much pro-Hindu. Some Christian organizations are beginning to withdraw from India because of government restrictions on funding from outside the country. 


Tuesday, May 17, 2016

North Korea Murders Christian Pastor in China

Christian pastor aiding North Koreans killed
in 'retaliation,' source says

A North Korean source said state security is trying to dodge blame for the group defection of restaurant workers.
By Elizabeth Shim


A North Korean woman and hostess stands outside a North Korean restaurant waiting for customers in Dandong, China's largest border city with North Korea. North Korea could be targeting individuals in China helping defectors in the border region, according to a source in North Korea. Photo by Stephen Shaver/UPI | License Photo

SEOUL, May 17 (UPI) -- A band of "gangsters" killed a Christian pastor who assisted North Korean defectors in China, according to a source in North Korea.

The incident was an act of "retaliation" for the defection of 13 North Korean restaurant workers in China, the source told South Korean news service Daily NK.

North Korea has claimed the defectors were "dragged" against their will to the South, and that they were "kidnapped" by South Korean intelligence agents.

That's right! Because if you were going to risk your life to abduct someone from North Korea, it would certainly be a bunch of waitresses. 

There's something seriously wrong with a government that has to lie so blatantly to their own people.

A South Korean activist group has also said North Korean agents cross into China to track down defectors and their helpers.

The Korean-Chinese pastor Han Chungryeol was the founder of Jangbaek Church in Jilin in 1993. As part of his work, he provided assistance to North Koreans in China.

Activists in the South have said Han was murdered on April 30, less than a month after 12 North Korean waitresses and their manager fled a state-run restaurant in Ningbo.

According to Daily NK's source, North Korea state security is trying to skirt blame for the group defection, and is recruiting thugs and deploying undercover agents posing as defector's relatives and border traders in order to penetrate the activities of human rights activists and missionaries in the region.

There's only one band of gangsters in North Korea and that is the entire government and military.

North Korea's Reconnaissance General Bureau is deploying young agents overseas, the source added.

Pyongyang is probably planning to abduct South Korean nationals, particularly those affiliated with the military and the government, as well as human rights activists, so that an exchange could be made for the 13 defectors, the source said.

Why not waitresses?

A South Korean Christian minister has gone missing, and according to a South Korean report, the minister, who was also a defector, could have been kidnapped to North Korea.