Showing posts with label kidnaping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kidnaping. Show all posts

Nov 5, 2009

Update: Kidnappers demand ransom for priest in the Philippines

On October 10, Michael Sinnott, a 79-year-old priest from Ireland, was abducted by six armed men in the city of Pagadian near Zamboanga (Mindanao), Philippines as he was conducting evening prayers in his home (click here for more information). Last week we reported that he was able to receive medication for his heart problems. This week, his kidnappers, who many believe are members of a rogue element of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, released video footage of the priest and demanded a $2 million (USD) ransom.

There continue to be grave concerns for Sinnott's health and safety. Please remember him in your prayers and pray for his release.

Oct 28, 2009

Update: Day of prayer and fasting called for kidnapped foreigners in Yemen



The three Christians who were killed in June
Four months after their abduction, there continues to be no reliable news on the condition of the remaining six expatriate Christians kidnapped in mid-June by unknown assailants in Yemen (read the story). On June 12, nine foreign Christians were abducted -- four German adults, three small German children, a British man and a South Korean woman -- after they ventured outside the city of Sa'ada. All of them worked at a hospital in the city. Shortly afterwards, Rita Stumpp (26) and Anita Gruenwald (24), German nurses in training, and Eom Young-sun (33) of South Korea were killed and their bodies found by local shepherds. Still missing are German doctor Johannes (36), his wife Sabine (36), their three children Lydia (4), Anna (3) and Simon (1) and British engineer Anthony S. Their whereabouts and condition remain unknown. Anthony is married but his wife did not accompany him on this trip.

As Middle East Concern (MEC) has noted, the work of the hospital where they worked has been severely reduced as a result, affecting the city and the wider area. No one has claimed responsibility for the abductions and killings, which MEC notes is "unusual within Yemeni culture, and heightens the concern and anxiety." The search for the missing has been greatly hindered by the intense fighting between the government forces and the Houthi armed group in Sa'ada province, which has flared up again since June.

According to MEC, Christians in Yemen have backed calls for a day of prayer and fasting on Saturday, October 31. For specific prayer requests, click here. Please plan to be involved if you can and encourage others to do so as well. Show your solidarity for the missing, their families and colleagues by posting a prayer on our Persecuted Church Prayer Wall.

Oct 7, 2009

Egypt: Police Arrest Coptic Father for Aiding Kidnapped Daughter

ASSIST News Service reports that Egyptian police arrested and held several Coptic men after they tried to help a Christian woman leave her Muslim husband. The men's wives were also arrested, but were released when neighbors protested the way they were handled. The men who were arrested are relatives of Rafaat Girges Habib, a man who helped a Coptic father free his kidnapped daughter from her Muslim husband's home. The arrests continued until Habib turned himself in to the police. The incident began when 20-year-old Myrna, who had been abducted and forced to marry a Muslim man, called her father and begged for help. Habib volunteered to help, and the men brought Myrna back after a struggle. Her husband, Mohamad Hefnawy, filed a complaint with police. Myrna was forced to return to her husband in order to secure her father's release along with the other Copts.