Thursday 29 April 2010

Street demonstrations in Japan protest kidnappings

Street demonstrations in Japan protest kidnappings

April 18, 2010, over 150 members of the Unification Church and supporters of religious freedom marched in Kurashiki City in Okayama Prefecture, near Japan’s west coast, to publicly accuse a local Japanese minister of complicity in the kidnapping and unlawful confinement of members of the Unification Church in often failed attempts to force them to abandon their faith.

According to the Unification Church Website in Japan, Pastor Masaharu Takayama, the head of the Kurashiki Grace Christian Church, attempted without success to break the faith of a Unification Church member last year. The faith-breaking victim was a young lady from Tottori P
refecture who was kidnapped in the Kurashiki area but who was rescued and returned to the Unification Church.
Read more:Street demonstrations in Japan protest kidnappings

Sunday 11 April 2010

Belgium poised to be first in EU to ban the burqa


From 
April 1, 2010

Belgium poised to be first in EU to ban the burqa

 a woman under her burqa
(Nicolas Asfouri/AFP)
Women who flout the ban will face up to seven days in jail or a fine of up to 25 euros
With Belgium on course to become the first EU country to ban the burqa, the Muslim tradition of covering women’s faces seems destined to end up in a European court battle pitting individual rights against society’s values.
MPs on Belgium’s home affairs committee have unanimously approved a ban on garments concealing the whole face or making it unrecognisable, setting up a vote in Parliament on April 22 that seems certain to pass given the cross-party consensus.
This would prohibit the full body burqa or face-covering niqab being worn in streets, public gardens, sports grounds and buildings "meant for public use or to provide services" to the public, according to draft Bill.
Women who flout the ban will face up to seven days in jail or a fine of betweem €15 and €25. Headscarves are not affected.
Belgian politicians rarely agree on anything but common ground has been reached on the veil amid a growing atmosphere of concern at Islamic extremism in the country. A group of Muslims are currently involved there in a high-profile trial for allegedly recruiting jihadi fighters for Afghanistan, where the Government has recently agreed to extend its mission as part of the Nato force.