Wednesday, 28 April 2010

NOAH'S ARK


A group of evangelical researchers claim they have found the remains of Noah's Ark thousands of feet up Mount Ararat, its biblical resting place, in Turkey.
The exact location of the find has not been disclosed, but carbon dating conducted on wood and stone from the site has revealed their age as 4,800 years old, according to the scientists.

Further tests will be conducted on the items but one researcher claimed they were "99.9 per cent sure" the remains were that of the original Ark.

According to the Old Testament story, God commanded Noah to build the Ark to save his family and the world's animals from a global flood - sent to rid the earth of mankind's corrupt behaviour.

Tuesday, 23 March 2010

BREAD & BREAKFAST REFUSED GAY COUPLE

Can't Stay If you’re Gay, B&B Tells Couple
The website for the Swiss Bed and Breakfast in Cookham, Berkshire, promises a "warm and friendly welcome".
But when Michael Black, 62, and 56-year-old John Morgan, from Brampton, Cambridgeshire, turned up on Friday the owner was immediately wary of them.
Mr Black told Sky News: "We said we'd booked a double room and she then said 'It goes against my convictions to have two men sharing'."
The couple had booked the Zurich room at the property on the internet.
When they informed owners Susanne and Mike Wilkinson it was illegal to turn them away on the grounds of their sexuality, they claim she said that because the property was her private home she was not breaking the law.
The Wilkinsons said: "We turned them away because we have a Christian faith and for us to allow people to engage in homosexual activity within our house would go against our faith."
The two men were given a refund and the following day they made an official complaint to the police.
Thames Valley Police say it is a civil rather than criminal offence, so it is up to the two men whether they want to take any further action.
Both men said they were shocked to meet such homophobia. They are surprised by the media interest in their story but are hopeful it will raise awareness of the legal situation for proprietors who were unaware.

Thursday, 4 February 2010

UGANDA ANTI GAY BILL

A Ugandan MP who proposed introducing the death penalty for some gay people has told a newspaper he is willing to change his draft legislation.

In an interview with the Daily Monitor, David Bahati said he had talked to the cabinet about the bill and was willing to "amend some clauses".

Earlier in the week the cabinet set up a committee to look at his proposals.

The plans have drawn global criticism - some Western countries threatening to withdraw aid if the bill becomes law.

President Yoweri Museveni distanced himself from the bill last week, telling his party that it was now a "foreign policy issue".


ANTI-HOMOSEXUALITY BILL
Death penalty
For "serial offenders", HIV-positive "offenders", or those engaging in homosexual activity with a minor or disabled person
Life in prison
For homosexual acts
Seven years in prison
For helping, counselling, or encouraging a person to engage in a homosexual act


Fear over gay death-penalty plans
The BBC's Joshua Mmali in the capital Kampala says the cabinet was expected to come up with a position on the bill earlier in the week.

But instead they set up the committee, with analysts saying the cabinet is split on the issue.

According to the Monitor, Mr Bahati does not expect his proposals to be altered radically by cabinet ministers.

He is a member of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) and the bill had been expected to garner wide support among members.

Homosexual acts are already punishable by up to 14 years in jail in Uganda.

Mr Bahati's private member's bill would raise that penalty to life in prison.

It also proposes the death penalty for a new offence of "aggravated homosexuality" - defined as when one of the participants is a minor, HIV-positive, disabled or a "serial offender".

Thursday, 7 January 2010

CAIRO RELIGIOUS RIOT


CAIRO – Thousands clashed with police during a funeral procession Thursday for six of seven people killed in an attack on churchgoers leaving a midnight Mass for Coptic Christians, security officials said.
Throughout the day, protesters in the southern town of Nag Hamadi pelted police with rocks and damaged cars and stores.
Early in the day, they smashed ambulances outside a hospital in frustration over delays in turning over the bodies for burial. A security official said police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd.
The riots resumed after the burial services, with angry Copts smashing shop windows, chasing Muslims off the streets and bringing down street light poles. The riots continued into the late afternoon.
The official and witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.
The riots followed an attack the previous night, in which three gunmen in a car sprayed automatic gunfire into a crowd leaving a church in Nag Hamadi, about 40 miles north of the ancient ruins of Luxor.
The lead attacker was identified by authorities as a known criminal.
Christians, mostly Copts, account for about 10 percent of Egypt's predominantly Muslim population of some 80 million people. They generally live in peace with Muslims although clashes and tensions occasionally occur in southern Egypt, mostly over land or church construction disputes.
In recent years, the clashes have spread to the capital.
Wednesday's attack, which happened on the holiest day in the Coptic calendar, was the worst known incident of sectarian violence in a decade.
In 2000, the deadliest Christian-Muslim clashes in years left 23 people dead. All but two of the 23 were Copts. The clashes were touched off by an argument between a Coptic merchant and a Muslim shopper in the southern village of el-Kusheh.
The latest attack, however, was unusual because it appeared to have been planned, rather than the customary spontaneous violence that arises from misunderstandings or disputes between Muslims and Copts.
Egypt's Interior Ministry said it suspected that Wednesday's attack was in retaliation for the alleged November rape of a Muslim girl by a Christian man in the same town. The man is in custody awaiting trial.
Security was tight in the town Thursday as police searched for suspects. The release of bodies may have been delayed because of fear the funerals would turn into a flashpoint for more violence.
The funeral procession took place later and was attended by local officials. The security officials said some 5,000 protesters shouted: "Long live the Cross," and "No to persecution." The protesters also stoned police cars, and scuffled with security. Shops shut their doors in the town to avoid the violence.
The Bishop of the Nag Hamadi Diocese said the dead were mostly young males in their teens.
As Islamic conservatism gains ground, Egypt's Christians have increasingly complained about discrimination by the Muslim majority.
Coptic Christians are limited in where they can build churches and must obtain government approval before expanding existing facilities. The government insists Christians enjoy the same rights as Muslims.
The head of provincial security, Mahmoud Gohar, said security was beefed up in the town and neighboring villages, and checkpoints were set up in the area as tensions ran high among the town's Christian population. Gohar said an angry crowd from a nearby church smashed two police cars shortly after the attack.
The attack, he said, happened in the town's main street about 200 meters (yards) from the church. He said nine people were injured in the attack, including three who were in critical condition.
Bishop Kirollos of the Nag Hamadi Diocese told The Associated Press six male churchgoers and one security guard were killed. He said he left St. John's church for his nearby home just minutes before the attack. He said he saw five bodies lying on the ground.
"I heard the mayhem, lots of machine gun shots," he said in a telephone interview.
The bishop said he was concerned about violence on the eve of the Coptic Christmas, which falls Thursday, because of previous threats following the alleged rape of the 12-year-old Muslim girl in November.
He recently received a message on his mobile phone that said: "It is your turn," he said.
"My faithful were also receiving threats in the streets, some shouting at them: 'We will not let you have festivities,'" he said.
Because of the threats, he said he ended his Christmas Mass one hour early.
He said Muslim residents of Nag Hamadi and neighboring villages rioted for five days in November and torched and damaged Christian properties in the area after the rape.
"For days, I had expected something to happen on Christmas Day," he said. The bishop said police have asked him to stay at home for fear of further violence.
Qena, in which Nag Hamadi is located, is one of Egypt's poorest and most conservative areas.
A recent Amnesty International report said attacks on the Coptic Christian community, comprising between 6 million and 8 million people in Egypt, increased in the year 2008, leaving eight people dead.
The bishop said the attack could have been motivated by revenge and blamed it on "Muslim radicals."
"Suppose it is vengeance, where was the security?" he asked.
"We are facing a religious war and lax security."