Source: http://rlprayerbulletin.blogspot.com 

Date:  February 19, 2020

by Elizabeth Kendal 

On Sunday 16 February a group of around 20 'armed terrorists' attacked a Protestant church in the north-eastern village of Pansi, close to the border with Niger in Yagha Province in Burkina Faso's volatile northern Sahel Region. The terrorists rode into Pansi on motorbikes and targeted the church, opening fire on believers as the worship service was underway. It was a massacre; at least 10 were killed and 18 wounded. The pastor was among 14 church members whom the terrorists abducted and subsequently murdered, bringing the death toll to 24. The militants set fire to the church and forced three abducted youths to help carry looted supplies. Victims were transported to the hospital in the regional capital, Dori, some 180km (110 miles) north-west of Pansi, in neighbouring Seno Province. Seeking safety, traumatised villagers fled to the provincial capital, Sebba, adding to the ever-growing numbers of internally displaced persons.

A week earlier, on Monday evening 10 February, Islamic militants murdered Lankoande Babilibile, a church deacon in Sebba. According to Barnabas Fund, the terrorists then stole Babilibile's car and used it to abduct Pastor Tindano Omar, whom they seized from his Sebba home along with his son, two daughters and two nephews. The bodies of Pastor Omar, his son and two nephews were found on 13 February; his two daughters had been released unharmed. Pastor Tindano Omar is survived by three other children who attend university in another region.

Terror is escalating at an alarming rate in Burkina Faso (BF). In 2018, dozens of troops were killed by roadside bombs and in ambushes that mostly targeted security forces. Since early 2019, however, the militants increasingly have targeted civilians. According to Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, which collects and analyses conflict information, more than 1,300 civilians - Christians and Muslims - were killed in targeted attacks in 2019. That is more than five times the number of civilians killed in 2018. Furthermore, around half a million people were displaced in 2019, over thirteen times as many as were displaced in 2018. This brings the total number of displaced persons to an estimated 760,000. The gross insecurity has forced the closure of around 95 healthcare centres and some 2,000 schools - mostly in the lawless east. More than 1.2 million Burkinabes are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance.

Unsurprisingly, demonstrations and riots have erupted across the country - especially in the capital Ouagadougou – protesting about escalating hardship and the government's failure to guarantee security. Religious Liberty Monitoring (RLM) is not alone in suspecting that the escalating insecurity and civil unrest is directly linked to the presidential and parliamentary elections and constitutional referendum scheduled for November 2020. [See RLM May 2019.] Many suspect that opposition elements - in particular the affiliates and the party of exiled former president Blaise Compaore (the Congress for Democracy and Progress), and indeed Blaise Compaore himself - are fuelling the insecurity for political gain. It is a familiar scenario: opposition elements fuel conflict which they then blame on the government while proffering themselves as potential saviours. If this is what is happening, then violence is destined to escalate. According to Operation World (2010), BF is 52 percent Muslim, 26 percent ethno-religionist, and 21 percent Christian (mostly Catholic). Despite being majority Muslim, BF has a long tradition of peaceful co-existence and religious freedom; it also has a democratically elected Christian president: Roch Marc Christian Kabore. The Battle for Burkina Faso has begun!

PLEASE PRAY THAT OUR ALMIGHTY GOD WILL 

* comfort those who mourn, grieve and tremble; heal those who are wounded in body, mind and/or spirit; and provide the needs of all who look to him in faith or even just in desperation.

* be a shield, defender, strong tower and refuge (Psalm 18:2), and guiding good shepherd (Psalm 23; Isaiah 40:11) to his Church.

* be an awakening and revealing light to Muslims and others who are struggling in darkness (John 8:12); and a consuming fire to those who would bring bloodshed, suffering, repression and evil to Burkina Faso (Isaiah 40:10; 59:14-19).

* hear our prayers and grace the government of Burkina Faso - and especially President Kabore - with all the wisdom and insight, conviction and courage, as well as the international support and assistance they need to turn back the battle in Burkina Faso, so that peace will be restored and liberty preserved.

'Though I walk in the midst of trouble, you preserve my life; you stretch out your hand against the wrath of my enemies, and your right hand delivers me. The Lord will fulfil his purpose for me; your steadfast love, O Lord, endures forever. Do not forsake the work of your hands.' (Psalm 138:7,8 ESV)

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IRAN UPDATE

Updating last week's RLPB 536 (12 Feb). The condition and whereabouts of Christian convert Fatemeh (Mary) Mohammadi (21), arrested in early January, are now known. Mary was severely beaten upon her arrest and horribly mistreated during interrogations. She is now incarcerated in Qarchak Prison. Located in a desert just south of Tehran, and with only 600 beds for over 2000 prisoners, Qarchak is regarded as the worst prison in Iran for women. It is one of two Iranian prisons sanctioned by the US for 'gross human rights violations'. Though her family has raised the bail (30 million tomans, equivalent to a year's wages) the court has not yet agreed to release her. Please pray.