Social Development and Advocacy Network Calls for Revamp and Immediate Resignation of Comelec Commissioners

Quezon City, Philippines – A social development and advocacy network has recently issued a statement calling for the revamp and resignation of Commission on Elections (COMELEC) officials as a reaction, to what it calls as an ever growing display of incompetence of the COMELEC in pursuing its mandate, especially with the recent abominable decision to give a green light to the midnight substitution bid of Ronald Cardema, former Chairman of National Youth Commission to assume the representation of the party-list Duterte Youth.

 “The COMELEC should be revamped. And urgently so, those who voted in favor of the midnight substitution of the Duterte Youth party representative, should resign. This decision is another blatant display of lack of competence in their decision making, and adds to their already dismal performance in managing the mid-term 2019 election,” Yoly Esguerra, Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc (PMPI) reiterated.

PMPI believes that the COMELEC decision is flawed. There were two obvious reasons why the ruling of the COMELEC should have been otherwise. First, Ronald Cardema is already 34 years old, and under Republic Act (RA) No. 7941, Section 9, he or she must at least be twenty-five (25) but not more than thirty (30) years of age on the day of the election. Second, Cardema filed his notice of substitution at 5:30 P.M. on May 12, Sunday, contrary to Resolution No. 8665, which prescribes the filing of pleadings or motions only during office hours on regular work days.

By these two glaring facts alone, an independent institution like the COMELEC should have decided against it. Even ordinary citizens can understand that these reasons are clearly a blatant disregard of an election rules as prescribed, the statement added.

Party List System bastardized by COMELEC

The party-list system was established through RA 7941 or Party-List System Act, it was meant to give voice and representation for those who are underrepresented sectors or groups such as in labor, peasant, urban poor, indigenous culture, women, youth, and other sectors.

We in PMPI in fact hailed it then as a step to give voice to “voiceless” section of society where they can bring their issues on the legislative table and push for solutions and protection of their rights.

Throughout the years however, we saw the system being bastardized and abused by no less than the COMELEC themselves as many party lists were which does not really represent the marginalized were approved by the COMELEC.

That the COMELEC decided in favor of legitimizing the Duterte Youth as party list whose main goal only is to support and protect the President Duterte shows lack of appreciation and understanding of the spirit of party list system.

COMELEC RESIGN!

The PMPI calls for the resignation of the five COMELEC commissioners who approved the substitution bid of former NYC Chairman Ronald Cardema as the first nominee of Duterte Youth party-list.

We continue to ask, by their recent actions, who do they seek to please and obey? Why Ronald Cardema remained in government offices during the election and then suddenly change mind on the eve of May 12, the day before the election? Who benefits from retaining a position in government where you have access to government resources during election? Is this not a strategy to go around the rule that all government officials who will run in an election should resign from office? Who engineered this strategy and who will gain and benefit from this decision?

 “We need a COMELEC that would uphold their own internal rules and regulations and one that can manage a national election without a 7 hours snags in electoral result, and who can explain this gaffes in public and with transparency. We don’t need blind followers. We don’t need more stamp pads. They are too many already in this government,” Manila Auxiliary Bishop Broderick Pabllo, PMPI NCR-Urban Cluster Bishop Convenor said.

Philippine Misereor Partnership, Inc. (PMPI), is a network of civil society organizations, rights groups, peace and faith-based institutions pushing for policy change in governance and helping communities achieved better lives.

PMPI Post-Election Statement

May 17, 2019

Sheriff Abas
Chairman
Commission on Elections
Dear Mr. Abas,

Greetings from PMPI National Secretariat!

The 2019 midterm election is over. Elections should have been the chance of a people to shape their own destiny. Yet, our experience of elections, regarded as the most massive platform for public participation in governance, has sadly always been missing its point of target.

The just concluded election is no different. The traditional politicians many of whom have graft and corruption cases, those with most money for campaign “tokens” or bribes and those with the most popularity and exposure “won”.

Cheating, fraud and vote-buying abound. No less than the President consider vote-buying “normal”. The vote-buying and glitches on the vote counting machines (VCM) are substantiated by reports coming from our partners in communities who tried to question the irregularities but were not able pursue it for fear for their life and security and distrust from the system.

Three reports have it that they voted for their chosen candidates but receipts included the name of Bong Go which was not part of their choice. Another voted 10 candidates however, the receipt yielded only eight names while the 9th and 10th are just dots. Another received a shaded ballot already. These are just few of the reports which manifest irregularities.

We, from the Philippine Misereor Partnership, Inc. (PMPI), a network of civil society organizations, rights groups, peace and faith-based institutions joins other civil society and church groups to demand accountability and transparency from the Commission on Election (Comelec).

The people have the right to know and be clarified:

1) Why was there a lull of 7 to 9 hours in the transmission of results to the transparency server, media and watchdog groups?

2) Why is there a sizable increase in glitches in the VCM and SD cards this year compared to previous elections?

3) Why is the central server and “meet me room” set-up of Comelec kept secret?

4) Why were the depository of receipts of the casted ballots unsealed and in carton or plastic boxes only?

5) Why is there lack of information on the voting process and there was no instruction during precinct voting on the manner of voting which lead to over-voting and inability of many to vote party list groups?

Weeks before the election we are mulling over these questions:

1) Why did the Comelec refuse to allow NAMFREL to have an open access to the data and information in real time of the transmission of results?

2) Why did the Comelec declared Nacionalista Party (NP), a known ally of the majority party as the dominant minority opposition?

In the spirit of transparency and accountability, these questions need be answered by the Comelec as these paint seeming conspiracy by the Comelec to rig the election.

The inability of the Comelec to explain what cause the sudden stoppage of transmission during the actual lull is unacceptable. There was no clear and thorough explanation on the so called “java error” provided during the lull. And when it finally resumed 90% of votes have been counted! Likewise keeping secret the central server and “meet me room” is a violation of the Omnibus Election Code.

The 1,699 voting counting machines (VCM) challenged by technical glitches, out of 85,000 VCMs, and almost a thousand SD cards malfunctioned compared to 188 only inthe 2016 election reek of inefficiency and unpreparedness. Even a newbie technical person would know that a huge data flooding the transmission and server needs a backup system.

Continue reading

ONE MINUTE FOR PEACE 2019

Observed next Saturday, June 8, is the fifth anniversary of the meeting, here in the Vatican, of the Presidents of Israel and of Palestine with me and with Patriarch Bartholomew. At 1:00 pm we are invited to dedicate “a minute” of prayer “for peace,” for believers; of reflection, for those that don’t believe: all together for a more fraternal world. Thanks to International Catholic Action that is promoting this initiative.
– Pope Francis – General Audience, 5th June

Lord God of peace, hear our prayer!
… Make us sensitive to the plea of our citizens who entreat us to turn our weapons of war into implements of peace, our trepidation into confident trust, and our quarreling into forgiveness. Keep alive within us the flame of hope, so that with patience and perseverance we may opt for dialogue and reconciliation. In this way may peace triumph at last, … and our way of life will always be that of: Shalom, Peace, Salaam! Amen.
INVOCATION FOR PEACE
Words of Pope Francis – Vatican Gardens – Sunday, 8 June 2014

On June 8 at 1 p.m. by ONE MINUTE FOR PEACE 2019 we take up the appeal of the Document “Human fraternity for world peace and living together” signed  in Abu Dhabi on February 2019 by Pope Francis and by the Great Imam Ahmad Al-Tayyeb: “Al-Azhar and the Catholic Church ask that this Document become the object of research and reflection in all schools, universities and institutes of formation, thus helping to educate new generations to bring goodness and peace to others, and to be defenders everywhere of the rights of the oppressed and of the least of our brothers and sisters”.

We invite all people around the world: Catholics and Christians of other denominations together with believers of other religions, men and women of good will “to unite and work together so that it may serve as a guide for future generations to advance a culture of mutual respect in the awareness of the great divine grace that makes all human beings brothers and sisters”. An occasion to remember also the VIII Centenary of St Francis’ encounter with the Sultan of Egypt Al-Malik Al-Kamel.

This initiative is aimed at individuals or groups and can become an occasion for meetings on June 8, or near this date, with a special care of the media and social media.

It’s up to us! Let us involve people to spread this initiative in order to count around the world a growing number of MINUTES FOR PEACE. One Minute for Peace” was launched by the International Forum of Catholic Action (IFCA), by the Italian Catholic Action and Argentinian Catholic Action, by the World Union of Catholic Women’s Organisations (WUCWO) and by others, for the first time on June 6, 2014 at 1 p.m., in support of the “Invocation for Peace” meeting, promoted by Pope Francis on June 8 in the Vatican Gardens together with the President of Israel (Simon Peres), the President of the Palestinian Authority (Maḥmūd ʿAbbās – Abu Mazen), and the Patriarch of Constantinople (Bartholomew I)

Invocation for Peace

Words of Pope Francis
Vatican Gardens
Sunday, 8 June 2014

Your Holiness,
Brothers and Sisters,

I greet you with immense joy and I wish to offer you, and the eminent delegations accompanying you, the same warm welcome which you gave to me during my recent pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

I am profoundly grateful to you for accepting my invitation to come here and to join in imploring from God the gift of peace. It is my hope that this meeting will be a path to seeking the things that unite, so as to overcome the things that divide.

I also thank Your Holiness, my venerable Brother Bartholomaios, for joining me in welcoming these illustrious guests. Your presence here is a great gift, a much-appreciated sign of support, and a testimony to the pilgrimage which we Christians are making towards full unity.

Your presence, dear Presidents, is a great sign of brotherhood which you offer as children of Abraham. It is also a concrete expression of trust in God, the Lord of history, who today looks upon all of us as brothers and who desires to guide us in his ways.

This meeting of prayer for peace in the Holy Land, in the Middle East and in the entire world is accompanied by the prayers of countless people of different cultures, nations, languages and religions: they have prayed for this meeting and even now they are united with us in the same supplication. It is a meeting which responds to the fervent desire of all who long for peace and dream of a world in which men and women can live as brothers and sisters and no longer as adversaries and enemies.

Dear Presidents, our world is a legacy bequeathed to us from past generations, but it is also on loan to us from our children: our children who are weary, worn out by conflicts and yearning for the dawn of peace, our children who plead with us to tear down the walls of enmity and to set out on the path of dialogue and peace, so that love and friendship will prevail.

Many, all too many, of those children have been innocent victims of war and violence, saplings cut down at the height of their promise. It is our duty to ensure that their sacrifice is not in vain. The memory of these children instils in us the courage of peace, the strength to persevere undaunted in dialogue, the patience to weave, day by day, an ever more robust fabric of respectful and peaceful coexistence, for the glory of God and the good of all.

Peacemaking calls for courage, much more so than warfare. It calls for the courage to say yes to encounter and no to conflict: yes to dialogue and no to violence; yes to negotiations and no to hostilities; yes to respect for agreements and no to acts of provocation; yes to sincerity and no to duplicity. All of this takes courage, it takes strength and tenacity.

History teaches that our own powers do not suffice. More than once we have been on the verge of peace, but the evil one, employing a variety of means, has succeeded in blocking it. That is why we are here, because we know and we believe that we need the help of God. We do not renounce our responsibilities, but we do call upon God in an act of supreme responsibility before our consciences and before our peoples. We have heard a summons, and we must respond. It is the summons to break the spiral of hatred and violence, and to break it by one word alone: the word “brother”. But to be able to utter this word we have to lift our eyes to heaven and acknowledge one another as children of one Father.

To him, the Father, in the Spirit of Jesus Christ, I now turn, begging the intercession of the Virgin Mary, a daughter of the Holy Land and our Mother.

Lord God of peace, hear our prayer!

We have tried so many times and over so many years to resolve our conflicts by our own powers and by the force of our arms. How many moments of hostility and darkness have we experienced; how much blood has been shed; how many lives have been shattered; how many hopes have been buried… But our efforts have been in vain.

Continue reading

Why ending ‘endo’ remains as Duterte’s unmet campaign promise

Bulatlat file photoThe Congress-approved Senate version does not prohibit fixed-term and multi-layered contracting as demanded by workers. Its provision on penalties and fines on employers and agencies engaged in illegal labor-only contracting is weak.

By Marya Salamat
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — Various labor organizations, except the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP), have expressed dissatisfaction with the Congress-approved Security of Tenure Bill passed a few days before the 17th Congress adjourns.All the bill awaits now is President Duterte’ signature for it to become a law.

As ending Endo is a trending campaign promise that helped Duterte secure popularity and votes in 2016, he has been asked by labor groups time and again to produce results.Endo is end of contract or the practice in which employers scrimp on wages and benefits by shuffling workers with work contracts for less than six months.

Duterte promised to end Endo in months. He delayed delivering on it by first requiring the labor groups, through Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, to unite and craft their proposed anti-endo policies and mechanisms.But Bello also took proposals from employers’ groups. He came up with Labor Department Order 174 that the labor groups rejected, saying it favored the employers more and merely “improved” the ways in which contractualization could continue.

On Labor Day 2018, Duterte signed the Executive Order (EO) 51 but labor groups, again, found that it would not end Endo because it’s still premised on the same stumbling block embodied in DO 174: it is not prohibiting but still allowing contractualization.

Labor groups Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) and Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino said the president, if he had really wanted it, is empowered by Labor Code to end Endo. The same power he and his alter ego, the Labor Secretary, uses to issue oepartment Orders regulating contractualization can just as well be used to ban it. Duterte passed the ball instead to Congress saying that prohibiting Endo requires legislation.

Continue reading

SoT bill not enough to end all forms of contractualization – labor NGO

24 May 2019

A labor research group takes on a more critical stance as it welcomes the passage of Security of Tenure Bill on final reading, saying that the broad labor unity and massive nationwide protests have pushed the administration to pass the bill with stricter prohibitions on labor-only contracting.

“The passage of SoT bill is a positive step in ensuring security of tenure of our workers. We must however remain cautious as the bill still retains that there is ‘legitimate’ labor contracting in spite of the workers’ demand to end to all forms of contractualization and other forms of flexible work arrangements,” said Rochelle Porras, Executive Director of Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research (EILER).

EILER noted that Section 3 and onwards of the bill still allow outsourcing, contracting and subcontracting as a legitimate labor practice and leaves DOLE the power to regulate contractualization. Despite the prohibitions the bill was aiming to set, many enterprises can still practice labor-only contracting even if this will be regulated. As such, the bill still does not essentially prohibit widespread contractualization.

 “Any provisions allowing job contracting or subcontracting defeats the purpose of ending all forms of contractualization. There should be no loopholes in the law where enterprises can circumvent the right to security of tenure of all workers across all industries,” Porras said.

Porras emphasized that the exploitative endo or the “end of contract” scheme deprives workers of living wages, freedom of association, security of tenure and other labor rights.

She also said that DOLE is not duly ensuring that enterprises are implementing all its regularization orders in favor of the workers. DOLE and non-compliant businesses must be held accountable for union-busting and dismissal of workers due to reversal of compliance orders.

 “We call on our newly elected house representatives and senators to stand firm against pressure from business groups who are still using the rubbish excuse that we need to promote contractualization to attract foreign investors. The truth is they are protecting their primary interest, which is to reap maximum profits from labor contracting,” Porras said.

 “Listen to the demands of the workers and ultimately pass a bill that strengthens constitutional provisions on regular employment. Junk neoliberal economic policies and promote decent, regular jobs with living wages in order to effectively end all forms of contractualization,” Porras ended.


Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research (EILER)
Telefax: +63 2 433 9287 | Facebook: /eilerincph | Twitter: @eilerinc | Instagram: @eilerinc

New Evangelization Conference 2019

May 7, 2019

To: Our Friends in the Federation of National Youth Organizations:

May the Peace of Christ be with you!

Last July 9, 2012, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) issued a Pastoral Letter on the Era of New Evangelization. Entitled “Live Christ, Share Christ,” it declared a 9-year novena of the Philippine Church leading to March 16, 2021, the fifth centenary of the coming of the Catholic faith in the country. This 2019, we celebrate “Filipino Youth in Mission: Beloved, Gifted, Empowered” aiming to produce youth who are committed to families, to the Church and to the country with a renewed passion to proclaim the Word, ready to work with their communities and the Church, and willing to share in molding a just and peaceful world through missionary involvement

In response to the call to new evangelization, The Live Christ, Share Christ (LCSC) intends to mainstream Catholic lay evangelization especially in this Year of the Youth.

In line with this, we are pleased to invite you to the New Evangelization Conference 2019 (NEC 2019) happening in three consecutive places: in Luzon this June 8, 2019, at the PICC Forum, Pasay City from 8AM to 5PM; Visayas on August in Bohol; and Mindanao on September in Cagayan de Oro. These are a free-admission event.

On its sixth year, we aim to gather at least 7,000 people to be part of this momentous event. There will be a Catholic Expo and Marian Exhibit, a Clarion Call competitions for band, choir, and song writing, and the annual Catholic New Evangelization Awards (CNEA). With this, we are extending this invitation to you, to participate and support this event by helping spread the word and inviting everyone to celebrate with us. Kindly register online through this link: http://tiny.cc/NEC2019

For further inquiries, please call (02) 726-7989 and look for Ms. Hope Reyes. We look forward to your favorable response. Thank you and God bless!

Stand Together for Peace – Let Compassion be the Common Religion of the World

To FABC MEMBERS

16th May 2019 in Bangkok

Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, SDB

Dear Friends,

Peace of Christ.

This is a painful talk.

Painful because we have gathered here after the death of innocent people, killed inside the church in Sri Lanka. Our prayers and fellowship are with the Christians families. This talk is painful because we belong to a faith tradition, that preaches NOT vengeance but forgiveness and reconciliation.

We never condoning the heinous crime against humanity, are called to emulate Christ who on the Cross amidst his grotesque suffering could call out “Father forgive them, for they do not know what they do”.

It is painful.

It is painful to know that Easter became Good Friday for our brothers and sisters in Sri Lanka on that fateful day. We sit at the graves of Holy Saturday and waiting for the streaks of hope of resurrection amidst the silence of the graves.

Until that happens the pain persists in the dawn, in the noon and through the pestering pain of the survivors, the relatives wading through this heart wrenching tragedy. Words fail in these paralyzing moments of darkness. A catastrophic tragedy reminding us of the cry of Rachel: A voice is heard in Ramah, weeping and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted, because they are no more.”

Increasingly persecuted community – Christians

As international groups have pointed out, Christians have become the most persecuted religious group in the world. In the Middle East, in China, in India, in Sri Lanka, in Egypt, in Libya and other places Christians have become the scapegoats. In many Middle Eastern Countries the once flourishing Christian communities have disappeared. Too many innocents lost their lives and their blood cries out.

The Challenging Task to the Shepherds of Asia.

We need to be people of Hope, especially those of us who are Shepherds. We cannot allow ourselves to be gripped by fear and paralysis. These are the moments the Shepherds need to walk through the way of the Cross – never losing the hope of a better tomorrow – not only for our people but those who fell victim to evil.

As Shepherds, we are called upon to be hope generating agents. Remember the Psalm 23. This is a Shepherd’s song. It is dark everywhere. With faith and hope let us sing with the psalmist: “Even if we walk through the Valley of Death, You will guide us”.

Road Ahead – Preaching Peace, promoting Reconciliation

The first task is to preach peace – not vengeance. I come from a country where religious extremism saw violence and tears of the thousands. When Pope Francis visited Myanmar, he left a mandate “Do not repay hatred with hatred. Be an instrument of peace”. Let us remember violence begets more violence. Killing begets more killing. And eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth is an outdated mandate. Remember Gandhi who said “an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.” Christ road-map is different “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” These words may look unkind and painful at the present situation. But that is the way of Cross.

Violence is for the weak. Non-Violence and forgiveness is possible only for those who are strong morally and spiritually. This sensibility needs to be nurtured among our people. The Church, in the words of Francis of Assisi, needs to become an instrument of peace praying “where there is hatred, let me sow love.”

At this juncture, Christians face four threats to their life and dignity:

1. Nationalism:

This phenomenon, often cited as a backlash to unfettered globalization is a fast spreading danger. Nationalism is defined as “loyalty and devotion to a nation, especially a sense of national consciousness “exalting one nation above all others and placing primary emphasis on promotion of its culture and interests as opposed to those of other nations or supranational groups.” The danger in many countries of Asia is a warped sense of victimhood of the majority community: “the minority complex of the majority community”. Both in Myanmar and Sri Lanka and in India, groups that celebrate their victimhood are becoming mainstreams. The minorities become the scapegoats. Rene Girard the philosopher has treated the violence against the minorities as the process of “scapegoating.”

Historically, nationalism has been used to define and explain everything from radical political and militaristic movements like Nazism to strong protectionist policies controlling modern foreign policy and economy. Nationalism, in its extreme forms, has led to genocide, the Holocaust, and more specifically, the ethnic cleansing in Bosnia in 1990s and elsewhere.

Many of us come from countries where the toxic lava of nationalism and hatred is in full flow. In India, self-professed “Hindu nationalist” Narendra Modi has been elected with a robust verdict. Violence against Christians and church personnel is becoming a norm. Even in Europe and US nationalistic politicians are on the rise. Over concerns for economic wellbeing, Britain announced its exit from the European Union in 2016, dubbed “Brexit.” Even in the most wealthy country like US white nationalism is threatening Jews and African Americans.

2. Terrorism: What is Terrorism?

In the last five years, Christians have shed blood in Asia and the Middle East by suicide bombing. Terrorism has been described variously as a tactic and strategy, a crime and a holy duty, as well as a justified reaction to oppression and an inexcusable abomination. But the killing of Christians is connected to the global conflicts in the near east, an increasing identification of Christians with the western political and economic interests. Attacking Christians also brings immense publicity for terrorists. The world has not taken seriously the silent genocide of Christians.

3. Religious Extremism

Some years ago, Professor Samuel Huntington wrote a provocative book: The Clash of Civilizations implying that the western Christian civilization will be at loggerheads with Islamic civilization impacting peace and development in the world. He proposed a hypothesis that people’s cultural and religious identities will be the primary source of conflict in the post-Cold War world. The events of the last two decades seem to prove his prediction. Violence in the name of religion is growing.

Terrorist acts done in the name of religion, typically aim to enforce a system of belief, viewpoint or opinion. The validity and scope of religious terrorism is limited to an individual’s view or a group’s view or interpretation of that belief system’s teachings. There are some researchers however, who argue that religion should be considered only one incidental factor and that such terrorism is primarily geopolitical.

What has happened in Middle East and Afghanistan in the last four decades is growing into international threat to small communities. With the spread of social media, terrorists have found safe spaces to spread their mission of hatred. In recent years religious riots in India, the slaughter of innocent Muslims at prayer by a white Nationalist in New Zealand, Muslim suicide bombers killing Christians in Sri Lanka have all made religion seem valueless and brought disgrace upon organized religion’s reputation.

What is missing is the vigorous condemnation of the fringe groups by the silent majority. God tells us that such activity must not be covered up or sanitized by believers. It must be vigorously and publicly condemned since it undermines the very ability of religion to influence people to live according to God’s directives. Now, people presume that religious people can do dastardly things.

A threatening example is ISIL (ISIS)

This group claimed responsibility for the Sri Lankan Easter attack. Thought to be wiped out in Middle East, the Sri Lankan attack demonstrated its growing influence in Asia and Africa.

ISIS aimed to create an Islamic state called a caliphate across Iraq, Syria and beyond. The group was implementing Sharia Law, rooted in eighth-century Islam, to establish a society that mirrors the region’s ancient past.

ISIS is known for killing dozens of people at a time and carrying out public executions, crucifixions and other acts. ISIS uses modern tools like social media to promote reactionary politics and religious fundamentalism.

Terrorism is not a poor man’s game

The jihadi bombings in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday are the latest reminder that terrorism is not driven by deprivation or ignorance. As with the 2016 cafe attack on foreigners in Dhaka, Bangladesh, the slaughter of churchgoers and hotel guests in Sri Lanka was carried out by educated Islamists from wealthy families. Two of the eight Sri Lankan suicide bombers were sons of one of the country’s wealthiest businessmen. Several of the attackers had the means to study abroad.

Terrorists are neither poor nor do they represent the interests of the poor. The interests of the West and its handling of the Middle East crisis continue to be the root cause of spread of disaffection and dastardly acts.

The past role of the West in supporting dark forces

Most of those who indulge in violence in the name of Islam are those inspired by an ultra conservative movement: Wahhabism. According to many authors, aided by the oil price boom, Saudi actively promoted these ultra conservative Islam, to various parts of the world.

But the oil price boom was not the only factor contributing to Wahhabism’s rapid spread. The so called Islamic terrorism did not start with the some Muslims. The export of this jihad-fostering ideology was also promoted by the United States and its allies to stem, for example, the threat from Soviet communism: The painful role of some rich western countries in the modern day terrorism is well documented. The CIA, according to the author Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (the nephew of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy), “nurtured violent jihadism as a Cold War weapon”. Targeting terrorists and their networks brings only temporary success—but the long-term strategy needs to focus on discrediting these ideologies that attract attackers.[1]

We need to understand innocent Christians are sacrificed because of the last five decades of geostrategic conflicts between the Islamic countries and the West. More such violence cannot be ruled out. The very name Christian has become a liability. Western Societies have the capacity to protect themselves. But Asian countries and African countries especially the Christians will bear the brunt of violence. We appeal to all nations – solve your geostrategic conflicts. Live and let live Asian Christians.

Response to Religious Violence

The West has not understood Islam. While western countries manipulated orthodox regimes like Saudi for cheap oil, in the bargain allowing the ultra conservative merciless Wahhabism to spread to every corner of the earth.

The role of Saudi needs to be isolated from Islamic communities and countries. There are 47 Muslim dominated countries and more than a quarter of them are at peace with multiculturalism.  

Terrorists and religious extremists gain when stereotyping of a whole religion for the crime of a few. We need to take notice Islamic terrorists have killed more Muslims than any other community.  

Continue reading