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India Christian Council Condemns Terror Blasts 
By: Ethan Cole 
Christian Post Reporter 
Posted: Tuesday, 4 November 2008, 10:55 (EST)
An Indian Christian group turned their attention to a northeast state that was 
devastated by a series of terror bombing this past week as violence against the 
minority Christian population continues to rage in the rest of the country. 

Some 74 people were reported dead and more than 370 injured in a series of 
blasts in the remote Indian state of Assam as of Friday, according to CNN. Nine 
bombs had exploded nearly simultaneously in crowded areas in Assam on Thursday. 

“There is no place for terror in civil society,” condemned Dr. Sam Paul, public 
affair national secretary of the All India Christian Council, in a statement. 
“Every Indian citizen must be united to [fight] terrorism in the country.” 

A Baptist church as well as the pastor’s quarter located in Assam’s capital, 
Guwahati, were among the buildings damaged by the blasts. 

“The front portion of the church building and half of the pastor’s quarter got 
burnt and pastor injured,” reported the Rev. M. Haokhothong, former treasurer 
of the Council of Baptist Churches in North East India. 

He also reported that about 15 shops belonging to Guwahati Baptist Church were 
“gutted” in the bomb blast. 

In response, angry residents of Guwahati burnt government and public properties 
and vehicles on the road. 

AICC has urged the public in Guwahati and North Eastern states to maintain 
peace and calm and to cooperate with security forces to fight against terror. 

The bomb blasts in Guwahati occurred against the backdrop of the anti-Christian 
campaign that has been ongoing for more than two months. 

More than 50,000 Indian Christians have been displaced with some 30,000 of them 
living in relief camps, according to news reports. More than 4,000 Christian 
homes, churches and businesses have also been destroyed. 

Last Tuesday, Father Bernard Digal, who was injured in late August by the 
anti-Christian violence in the eastern state of Orissa, died in Chennai, 
according to AICC. He is the first Roman Catholic priest killed by the 
violence. 

According to Indian Catholic News Service, Digal was attacked on Aug. 24, when 
he was brutally beaten and left in a field overnight. He was subsequently taken 
to a local hospital then transferred to other hospitals for further treatment. 
He recovered and was released only to be recently admitted to the Chennai 
hospital where he died at age of 47. 

At least six Protestant pastors have been killed in the riots, according to 
AICC. And more than 54 Christians have died in the violence. 

Regarding the Assam bombings, a terror group calling itself “The Islamic 
Security Force (Indian Mujahideen)” claimed responsibility for the serial 
bombings on Friday, according to Indo-Asian News Service. 
The group had sent a text message to a local television channel in Guwahati 
taking responsibility for the terror act. Police are investigating the source 
of the SMS message but refused to release details, citing security concerns. 
But police have detained more than 15 people for interrogation in connection 
with the bombings. 

Last week’s terror blasts followed a similar one in September in New Delhi that 
killed more than 30 people, which the Indian Mujahedeen had also claimed 
responsibility. 

Indian Mujahedeen also took responsibility for the 17 blasts in the western 
Indian city of Ahmedabad on July 26 that killed 49 people and injured more than 
100 others.


      

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