Zprávy HCJB 19.4.2006

 INDICKÝ NEJVYŠŠÍ SOUD ANULOVAL PŘÍKAZ K VAZBĚ MISIJNÍHO PŘEDSTAVITELE
   Indický nejvyšší soud zaručil zakladateli Hopegivers International M. A. Thomasovi propuštění z případné vazby a stanovil soudní slyšení o případu před soudem v severoindickém státu Radžastán na pátek 21.dubna. 72letý Thomas je nucen se více než 2 měsíce skrývat, protože ze strany radikálů je mu vyhrožováno smrtí a místní úřady mohutně pronásledují křesťany. „Toto je velká zpráva,“ řekl výkonný ředitel Hopegivers Michael Glenn, který se nedávno vrátil z průzkumné misie v Dillí. „Stále však potřebujeme modlitby i dopisy.“ Glenn vedl skupinu složenou z vedoucích pracovníků Hopegivers Internmational, kteří se na místě snažili pochopit příčiny nenávistné kampaně a pronásledování Thomase a jeho syna Samuele Thomase Ten byl uvězněn před pěti týdny na základě obvinění z „vyvolávání společenského nesouladu.“ Projednávání jeho žádosti o kauci bylo odloženo o tři týdny a bylo stanoveno na pondělí 24.dubna. Viz související zpráva z 24.3.2006 (Assist News Service)
 
 VŠECHNY ZPRÁVY V ANGLIČTINĚ
   INDIA’S SUPREME COURT VOIDS ARREST WARRANT FOR MISSION LEADER

India’s Supreme Court has granted Hopegivers’ founder M.A. Thomas relief from an outstanding arrest warrant and ordered a hearing before a court in the country’s northwestern state of Rajasthan Friday, April 21. Thomas, 72, had been forced into hiding for more than two months because of death threats from radicals and persecution by anti-Christian local authorities. “This is great news,” said Hopegivers Chief Operating Officer Michael Glenn who recently returned from a fact-finding mission to New Delhi. “But we still need to keep praying and writing letters.” Glenn led a delegation from the Hopegivers International board of directors trying to understand the violent campaign of persecution against Thomas and his son, Samuel Thomas, who has been imprisoned for five weeks on charges of “creating communal disharmony.” His bail hearing has břen delayed three times and has been set for Monday, April 24. (Assist News Service)

MYANMAR GOVERNMENT STEPS UP ATTACKS ON CHRISTIAN VILLAGES

The military government in Myanmar (Burma) has launched a new wave of attacks against predominantly Christian Karen villages, reported the Christian Newswire on behalf of Christian Freedom International (CFI). “In Burma this time of year is known locally as the ‘killing season,’ and this year is no exception,” stated the CFI report. “During the dry season soldiers can move more easily in the dense jungles of Burma, and this year the military junta has stepped up its genocidal attacks on the Karen, an ethnic minority in Burma.” Saw Aro, 50, a soldier with the Karen National Liberation Army, said that more than 700 displaced men, women and children recently arrived in the village of Ko Kay from the Toungoo and Nyaunglebin districts. “The Burmese Army brought in 10 battalions with some 1,500 new soldiers from Rangoo,” Aro explained. “They try to find Karen villages. If they see the villagers, they try to capture and persecute them. So people who live there . . . have fled their villages and are hiding in safe places in the mountainside and jungle to save their lives.” (Assist News Service)

NEW DISTRIBUTION CENTER IN COLOMBIA TO BOOST PRISON OUTREACH

Despite unrest and violence that has plagued Colombia for decades, Crossroad Bible Institute (CBI) opened a new materials distribution center in the country last week. CBI’s Kathryn Shane says it’s a strategic advance for prison ministry. “This means that CBI is not just reaching inmates here in the U.S. or in Australia or Canada, but that in Colombia we’re reaching more inmates than we could otherwise,” she said. “It’s also exciting because we’re equipping local church members there in Colombia to learn how to disciple inmates.” Shane says the mission’s outreach could have a far-reaching impact. “For the last couple decades especially [the prisons have] just been so violent and so overrun by the guerrilla fighters and drug traffickers. A lot of those are in prison now, and so the more we can impact them, the more impact we can have on the country as a whole.” (Mission Network News)

* Together with local partners, HCJB World Radio broadcasts the gospel on FM stations in four Colombian cities. The ministry also continues to air Spanish programs across the country and all of Latin America via shortwave from Quito.

SOUTHERN BAPTIST MISSIONS HEAD RESIGNS FOLLOWING CRITICAL REPORT

North American Mission Board (NAMB) President Robert E. Reccord announced his resignation, effective immediately, the morning of Monday, April 17, following a critical assessment of the agency, reported The Christian Post. The Christian Index had released a report in late February that listed the NAMB’s shortcomings and failures to complete certain missions projects. The report prompted an investigation into Reccord’s leadership, leading to his resignation. “While others might have placed their own personal wellbeing ahead of what was best for NAMB, Dr. Reccord is doing just the opposite,” said NAMB Board Chairman Barry Holcomb. While Reccord was not forced to resign, he took the “high road of leadership” on behalf of the agency, said Holcomb. Reccord leaves with mixed emotions. “I am thankful for the countless number of people we have seen come to Christ and the thousands of churches we have seen planted and nurtured,” he said. “On the other hand I regret we were not able to complete a number of things we started or dreamed about. I regret that events of recent weeks have created an environment which makes it difficult to lead the organization and to stay on mission.” (Religion Today)

ANNUAL WORLDWIDE WEEKEND OF PRAYER SET TO BATTLE ADDICTIONS

The 16th annual Worldwide Weekend of Prayer and Fasting organized by Just Pray No takes place this weekend (April 22-23). Just Pray No founder Steven Sherman said that in the past 15 years his group has had intercessors praying to break bondages and pull down the strongholds of addiction from every state in the U.S. and from six continents. “The Just Pray No weekend is based upon the fact that we have the answer to all addictions,” Sherman said. “We have the answer to all of spiritual bondages, and that is the deliverance that’s brought through the ministry of Jesus Christ.” Sherman said he looks upon his work as a recovery ministry focused on teaching the gospel. His approach to addiction is to first recognize that it is a spiritual problem, he said. “This is a battle that has to be fought with spiritual weapons,” he explains. For details visit JustPrayNo.org. (Assist News Service)

* VOICE OF THE ANDES BEGINS ANTENNA REMOVAL, SCRUTINIZES SHORTWAVE

Even as HCJB World Radio has begun dismantling shortwave radio antennas at its Ecuador broadcast site in Pifo, strategic opportunities for spreading the gospel via radio are emerging for the mission.

To accommodate new international airport construction near the capital city of Quito, missionary engineers and national staff have lowered a two-antenna curtain array that Radio Station HCJB, the “Voice of the Andes,” formerly used to air programs to the South Pacific and Europe. In 2003 the mission switched to local and regional AM and FM broadcasts in these regions while refocusing its Ecuador-based international shortwave outreach on Latin America. Other antennas will also be dismantled in accordance with the mission’s late-December agreement with the Quito Airport Corporation (CORPAQ) which is compensating the mission for labor, but not providing funds for new site construction.

“We know that 30 towers at the Pifo site have to come down by December 2007,” explained Jim Estes, director of HCJB World Radio’s Latin America region, referring to antenna systems that could obstruct the approach of landing planes. Pifo is a town about 15 miles east of Quito.

Of 48 towers sustaining 32 antenna systems on the 110-acre site, another 18 lower-height antennas -- whose signals do reach Latin America -- will not impede approach. But those too will be dismantled by the time airport operations are expected to begin in 2009.

Mission leadership has determined that the station will not risk potential radio interference to future air traffic communications once commercial flights begin. Barring unforeseen circumstances, all transmissions from the Pifo site (including Spanish, Portuguese, German, Low German, English and various indigenous languages, including Quichua) are expected to end sometime in 2009.

Beyond that, Estes and Radio Director Doug Weber are considering various options, including the idea of building a new, smaller site in Ecuador as the mission reviews how shortwave radio in Ecuador fits into its objectives of reaching the world for Christ. Other options include buying airtime from other broadcasters or placing transmitters at other sites owned by likeminded missions.

“We’re going through a process right now with our engineering crew of studying all three of those options to see what the cost is,” Estes said. “And cost is one of the issues for us. We’re trying to be as economical as we can be.”

A 100-kilowatt transmitter has already been shipped from Pifo to HCJB World Radio-Australia’s shortwave site at Kununurra. That facility began transmissions in mostly Asian languages (in addition to English) in January 2003. Staff at the Australian site expect the transmitter to be on the air by early April.

Ten shortwave transmitters remain in Ecuador where Radio Station HCJB began broadcasting from Quito in 1931. The international transmitter site was later moved to Pifo in the early 1950s. Four of those transmitters were designed and built at the HCJB World Radio Engineering Center in Elkhart, Ind., including a powerful 500,000-watt unit.

Changes at Pifo are not expected to diminish the mission’s participation in the World by Radio (previously known as World by 2000) effort begun in 1985 whereby Christian international broadcasters committed to make gospel broadcasts available in all the world’s major languages.

Of the 28 World by Radio languages involving HCJB World Radio, those that once aired from Quito have since been shifted to other locations, including a shortwave site in the U.K. that reaches the Euro-Asia and North Africa/Middle East regions.

Of more than a dozen languages that air from Australia, two -- Bhojpuri and Chattisgarhi, both spoken in India -- are World by Radio languages. Still other World by Radio languages are aired by local stations and networks worldwide.

“We’re involved in radio all around the world, but our involvement is much different than what we’ve done historically here from Ecuador,” Estes said. “It’s more of an involvement where we’re helping local people develop their radio ministries to reach their own people.

“Here in Latin America we’ve helped [radio ministries] everywhere from Buenos Aires up to Havana with such things as studios, equipment, technical advice and training on how to do radio,” he added. “It’s quite exciting to see.” Since the 1990s the mission has aided local Christian radio endeavors in some 300 cities in more than 100 countries while facilitating network programming via satellite in all but one of its five global regions.

Assistance to local partners is facilitated by the engineering center, and the center’s pioneering work in digital shortwave radio also presses on, with continued development and testing of Digital Radio Mondial (DRM) equipment -- digital broadcasting for the shortwave transmitters produced there.

The Pifo site is part of that project, said Weber, who also heads the DRM task force for HCJB World Radio. “We have participated in DRM tests from down here with the DRM consortium, and we will continue to do tests over the next few years,” he explained. “We are very much monitoring DRM in its development in Latin America, hoping that we can eventually use that technology and be a pioneer within Latin America, not only in digital shortwave but in digital AM.”

An announcement 10 years ago had alerted the mission’s engineers that Quito’s long-awaited new airport might be built just six miles from the mission’s shortwave facilities at Pifo. Impending changes looked more certain by mid-1997 when aviation authorities said that due to potential interference, HCJB needed to dismantle its Pifo installations.

Subsequent plans to dismantle and move the Pifo installation to Ecuador’s coast were first tabled in 2003 by mission leadership, and later scrapped due to concerns about increased energy costs. Electricity for the high-powered transmitters has been generated at a mission-built hydroelectric plant in nearby Papallacta. (HCJB World Radio)

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