-Caveat Lector-

http://www.domini.org/openbook/afg20010910.htm




Project Open Book  <http://www.domini.org/openbook>


Documenting the Persecution of Christians in the Islamic World

Taliban Arrest 35 Afghans Working for Another Aid Group

By Barbara Baker


AFGHANISTAN: September 10 (Compass) -- Taliban authorities arrested 35
more Afghan aid workers over the weekend, bringing the total to more than
50 Afghans jailed by the strict Islamist regime since early August on
suspicion of aiding covert Christian missionary work.

According to international aid workers who asked not to be identified, at
least 35 Afghans employed by the recently banned International Assistance
Mission (IAM) were taken into custody at the Planning Ministry office in
Kabul when they came to get their salary payment.

Quoted yesterday by Associated Press (AP), the sources said a state- run
radio broadcast had ordered Afghan staffers of IAM to come and collect
their pay at the Planning Ministry, which coordinates all foreign aid
organizations.

"When the Afghans showed up, they were arrested," AP reported.

In a separate report from the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), an
expatriate aid worker said she knew of some 15 to 17 Afghan employees of
IAM who had been arrested by the Taliban's religious police since the
Christian relief group was shut down on August 31.

"I do not know the reason for their arrest," the aid worker told APP, "but
they were taken into custody during the first week of September and have
not been seen since then."

The Taliban have not yet confirmed or commented on the reported detentions.

A private volunteer agency that had 117 professionals from 17 countries
working in five cities of Afghanistan, IAM had employed some 300 Afghans in
its projects of health, economic development, education and rehabilitation.
Its entire foreign staff was expelled from the country 10 days ago.

The Taliban have accused IAM and another Christian agency, SERVE, of links
with the Shelter Now relief organization, shut down in early August for
allegedly trying to convert Muslim Afghans to Christianity.   The regime's
religious police arrested eight foreigners and 16 Afghans working for
Shelter Now.

Speaking from Kabul today, a spokesman for the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) told Compass that their office had no "precise
information at this moment" about the alleged arrest of 35 Afghan IAM
staff.

Following established procedure, the Red Cross had last month informed the
Taliban of their readiness, "upon the regime's invitation," to visit
Shelter Now's 16 Afghan detainees. A similar offer had been extended on
behalf of the Christian relief group's foreign detainees, eventually
visited by the ICRC on August 25.

"But so far, we haven't been called for the Afghans," the representative
said.

A senior Taliban official told Associated Press last week that some of the
16 Afghans working for Shelter Now would be either sentenced to life in
jail or death by hanging. Those most endangered, local sources said, were
the Afghans involved in teaching the local languages to the foreigners.

According to the Taliban's deputy minister of religious police, any Afghan
convicted of converting to Christianity would be given three days to recant
and return to Islam. But even if spared the death penalty for repenting,
the official said, the defendant would still face other punishments for
"betraying their religion and traditions."

Taliban Minister for Vice and Virtue Mohammed Wali declared that the
Afghans must be charged "because they must have known what these foreigners
were doing, and they did not report them."

Although the Taliban claim to have "strong evidence" that Shelter Now's
foreign staff were preaching Christianity, they have not presented proof
that any Afghans had actually converted.

Taliban officials continue to sidestep the death penalty possibility which
hangs over both the foreigners and their Afghan workers, stating that once
a verdict is reached, the punishment will be decided "according to the
principles of Islamic law."

"If the crime is worthy of imprisonment, they will be imprisoned," Chief
Justice Noor Mohammed Saqib of the Taliban Supreme Court told Afghan Islam
Press (AIP) last week. "If the crime is worthy of hanging, they will be
hanged."

Copyright 2001 Compass Direct

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             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

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  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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