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Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (53226)8/26/1999 2:13:00 PM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108807
 
Neocon, christian evangelist tries to save the suffering of people of color while the world ignores the atrocities.

Suffering, Death and Hope in Sudan's Nuba Mountains

Gary Lane
August 24, 1999

-- CBN News Senior Reporter Gary Lane traveled to the Nubas to file this report.

Imagine your own government launching weekly aerial bombing raids against you and your neighbors, murdering your family members or burning homes and churches in your town.

That's the tragic way of life for Christians and animists in Sudan.

A growing number of Americans are now aware of human rights atrocities in the African nation, but the Sudanese are still suffering and their needs are overwhelming -- particularly in an area known as the Nuba mountains.

The cries of suffering Sudanese appear to fall on deaf ears as Khartoum's holy jihad continues. So far nearly two million people have perished: that's more than wars in Kosovo, Bosnia, Somalia and Chechnya combined.

But the southern Sudanese aren't the only ones who have suffered at the hands of their nation's brutal military regime.

Just north of the southern zone is the Nuba mountains. No people have suffered more in this 16-year civil war than the Nubian people. They're caught in a power struggle between north and south.

Sudanese government troops have surrounded the Nuba Mountains: airstrips have been bombed and are inaccessible; relief supplies from the United Nations and others are not allowed in. The people of the Nubas are isolated, cut off from the outside world.

The governor of the Nubas, Yusif Kuwa Mekki, says Khartoum wants to prevent the Nuba people from aligning themselves with the south: "Being with the south, we strengthen the south. That is why they are bitter, that is why they are refusing relief....We are actually closed from the south, from the north...No medicine and people die. We have enough medicine here to treat 20,000 people for 90 days, or three months for the people of the Nuba mountains."

After an absence of more than two years, Voice of the Martyrs missionary Ray Thorne returned to the Nuba mountains to head up a joint mission with CBN's Operation Blessing. The team delivered ten tons of relief to the suffering Nubians.

In March 1997, after Thorne and colleague Kevin Turner came under attack by Sudanese government helicopter gunships, they spent ten days trapped in the Nubas without food and water.

Several villagers were killed in the assault. Thorne and Turner say the prayers of Christians and God's grace helped them make it out alive.

So why did Thorne return to the Nubas and endanger his life once again? "It's a risky place to go, Thorne says, "but Jesus is worthy of our service, and because of our great love for Him and for the people -- the love He has given us for the people -- I mean, how can we not go?"

The VOM/Operation Blessing team also delivered bales of clothing. Each bale consisted of approximately 300 articles of clothing. Thorne personally clothed a six-year-old boy who was left naked and uncared for when his mother abandoned him. Seeds and tools were brought in so the people could grow their own food.

And 1,500 lifepacks were delivered. Each pack contains essential items for everyday living in Sudan, like cooking utensils and mosquito nets. VOM says it hopes to deliver 30,000 kits to the people of Sudan this year.

Five hundred Bibles, 5,000 hymnals, and gospel tracks printed by World Missionary Press were delivered, and at night, the missionaries showed the "Jesus" film.

The next morning, they shared the gospel. VOM team member and pastor Tom Zurowski of Hellfighters International spoke about suffering and referred to a comment once made by Corrie Ten Boom. "She said that no pit is so deep that Jesus isn't deeper still."

This Nubian pastor -- we'll call him Pastor William to protect his identity --describes his suffering as joy. The government jailed him twice for converting Muslims to Christianity. "I was actually happy at the time," Pastor William said, "because Jesus said whoever follows me will suffer for me. Of course I was very happy because of that."

Pastor William continues to evangelize Muslims and others in the region, as Khartoum intensifies its holy war on the Nubas and the south. On July 17, a government airplane dropped bombs on one Nuba mountain village, killing eight people -- mostly children -- all under the age of twenty.

And on July 23, the Sudan People's Liberation Army reported an Antonov aircraft dropped 16 bombs on the cities of Lainya and Kaaya, one, says the SPLA, was a chemical or biological weapon. The people of Lainya became sick and started vomiting blood. Goats, sheep, cats, dogs and birds died. Says Samson Kwaje, "Nearly all pregnant women in the area have miscarried. It is purely a civilian center. There are no soldiers there. We don't have soldiers there."

CBN News has visited Lainya on several occasions to document the delivery of Bibles and other humanitarian relief. Two of the U.N.'s world food program workers became ill after passing through the area. The U.N. has sent a team to investigate.

President Clinton has announced he will appoint a special peace envoy for Sudan in an effort to end the war there, and the U.S. Senate has approved legislation that will provide direct humanitarian aid to opposition forces.

Meanwhile, Ray Thorne says he'll return to the Nuba mountains to hand out more blankets to the elderly, women and children.

Tom Zurowski says he'll never be the same: "I thought to myself, how could I never want to invest in these kids?...And I think if we can just reach out and give love for free to these young people -- these little children -- to be able to give them a hope for their future, wow, what better way can we spend our time?"



To: Neocon who wrote (53226)8/26/1999 2:52:00 PM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108807
 
Teen sent out of state to undergo abortion. 14-year-old ward of court is 23 weeks pregnant

The Arizona Republic

By Chris Moeser
The Arizona Republic
Aug. 25, 1999

A Maricopa County Superior Court judge has ordered state child welfare officials to take a 14-year-old girl who is 23 weeks pregnant out of state for an abortion.

The abortion must be performed outside Arizona because a new state law has essentially eliminated abortions in most cases after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

The ruling has outraged abortion opponents, who say the decision violates state law that forbids state money being spent on abortions. But state child protection officials and representatives for Gov. Jane Hull say the action is legal and is the only option available after the court order was issued.

The girl, who reportedly has been in the state child welfare system since she was 5 years old, became a ward of the court after apparently running away repeatedly from foster parents and group homes.

Her name was not released by state officials because names of children in foster care are kept confidential.

"Obviously, this is a very tragic situation," said Francie Noyes, a spokeswoman for Hull. "The girl is a ward of the court. The court is acting in the role of the parents and obviously (the Department of Economic Security) will follow its orders. . . . The court did order to terminate the pregnancy . . . out of state."

Noyes said the procedure would likely be performed "fairly soon," but she did not provide any additional information.

Lawmakers who oppose abortion, meanwhile, say the state hasn't done enough to overturn the decision.

"We're extremely outraged," House Speaker Jeff Groscost said. "They're trying to take the child across the state line for a purpose, and that purpose is . . . they can't do it here. I'm very disappointed that at the very least we haven't had an appeal."

Senate Majority Leader Rusty Bowers, R-Mesa, is vowing to fight the confirmation next year of DES head John Clayton if nothing is done to stop it. Abortion opponents say the ruling is intentionally skirting the state law that forbids state money to pay for abortions unless the procedure is needed to save the life of the mother.

The details in the case are sketchy, but the order was issued this month by Judge William Sargeant, who could not be reached for comment.

According to John Jakubczyk, the president of Arizona Right to Life, the girl, along with her court-appointed advocate, requested that she receive an abortion when she was 14-weeks pregnant.

Jakubczyk said he learned of the case after being tipped off by officials familiar with the girl's situation.

Jakubczyk said the girl ran away and didn't resurface until last week. At that point, Sargeant ordered Child Protective Services to transport the girl to another state, most likely California, that performs abortions at that stage of pregnancy.

Federal law allows abortions to be performed in cases of rape or incest as well as danger to the mother.

The girl, according to Jakubczyk, told court officials she had been raped. In addition, statutory rape laws say that any sexual activity for 14-year-olds can be considered rape. That qualifies for the exception under the federal law, according to Sally Ordini, a DES spokeswoman.

Ordini would not comment specifically on the case. But she said the both medical and transportation costs in these types of cases would be covered by federal Medicaid funds, meaning no state funds are involved.

She added that the state is required to provide health care for those in its charge.

"Any child that is in state custody, the state covers their medical expenses. If a judge orders the state to provide and pay for medical care for a child who is dependent on the state and it's legal, then we have to carry it out," Ordini said.

"DES doesn't make these decisions."

She added that if a child in state custody needed eye surgery and Boston was the only place that care was available, the state would cover the care.

But Rep. Laura Knaperek, R-Tempe, pointed out that only two states, California and Kansas, perform abortions at this stage of pregnancy.

"That to me is a big signal there is an issue with an over 20-week abortion," she said. "Here we have people claiming they're acting in the best interests of the child perhaps doing the opposite."

Knaperek blasted state officials for not doing enough to fight Sargeant's order, saying "they would have found a way" to appeal it if they truly opposed it.

Jakubczyk wonders how many times situations like this have occurred at CPS. Because most juvenile records are sealed, it's difficult for the public to get information on these cases, he said.

He also questions why the child wasn't adopted and instead left in the child welfare system. Jakubczyk said her mother was murdered when she was younger and her father is in prison.

"How much she's making the decision, who knows? I've got real questions about who's consenting and who's forcing," he said.

Groscost vows a careful review of DES if the girl receives an abortion. He argues it may be safer and less expensive for the girl to undergo a Caesarean section.

"By the time this is over there will be a full accounting of how this abortion proceeded. Their ducks better be in a row. The better have tried to fully comply with state law," he said.

Noyes said state officials are simply out of options.

"The people that are working in the girl's best interests believe this is the best interests," she said. "The court agreed and did issue the order."