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1
May 2002
a time is coming when anyone who kills
you
will think he is offering a service to God. John 16:2
Todays
21st Century evangelists and missionaries, concerned about
accommodations in the target areas of their attention, frequently
ask, What kind of hotels do they have in that town?
By contrast, First-century evangelist and missionaries usually
asked, What kind of jails do they have in that town?
Thats where they generally wound up.
Times havent changed much today in restricted-access
countries where Frontline Fellowship missionaries
serve. Read on, and praise the Lord for His mercy.
After
much prayer and international pressure evangelical Bishop
Bullen Dolli and Dr. Peter Hammond were released, following
6-days of detention last month by the Sudanese Peoples Liberation
Army (SPLA). They were held just short of a week in Yei,
at the headquarters of the SPLA in Western Equatoria.
Intensive investigation by the SPLA Public Security Office
and Military Intelligence revealed an intricate and diabolical
plot to discredit the Christian ministry of dedicated missionaries
and to murder Bishop Bullen Dolli and Rev. Peter Hammond.
These two key Christian figures were on the National Islamic
Front hit list. Bishop Bullen Dolli, well known for his
strong public stand against the NIF Government in Khartoum,
recently received an award for defending religious freedom
from the Institute for Religion and Democracy in Washington
DC. On his visit to America last year he toured 35 states
exposing first-hand the NIF's brutal religious persecution
in southern Sudan, where two million Christians have been
slaughtered in the 18-year Jihad, or holy war. Bishop Dolli's
church, the Fraser Cathedral in Lui, still bears the scars
from repeated bombing campaigns by the Muslim Sudan Air
Force.
The drama began last year when four short wave radios were
brought into Southern Sudan by Frontline Fellowship and
handed over as gifts. These were intended to establish a
reliable and much needed communication link between the
Samaritans Purse hospital, the conservative Episcopal
Church of Sudan and the FF mission base in Mundri.
Somehow the Islamic Government of Sudan (GOS) got word of
this and launched a clever, triple-play scheme designed
to eliminate three thorns in the flesh to Islam:
the evangelical Bishop Bullen Dolli, Dr. Peter Hammond and
to discredit the SPLA in otherwise friendly Western circles.
Soon the National Islamic Front (NIF) in Khartoum leaked
false information to junior officers of the SPLA saying,
We have introduced four radios into the South for
espionage purposes. Each unit has within it the capability
to advise us of all transmissions.
When Frontline Fellowship brought in radios for the Churches
it was assumed that Bishop Bullen Dolli and missionary Peter
Hammond must be the ones in contact with the Islamic Government.
Arrest warrants were issued for the Bishop and for Dr. Hammond,
director of Frontline Fellowship, charging them with treason
a capital offense.
Disinformation works very well among simple people with
no technical means to check the veracity of a rumor. The
lie seemed plausible. Junior officers in the SPLA were aware
of the four radios brought in by FF, who had made no secret
of their desire to help improve communication.
In December 2001 orders went out from SPLA southern HQ in
Yei to confiscate the radios and arrest those involved with
them. Two church radio operators, Joseph and Dominic, were
whipped with over 75 lashes each for resisting handing over
the radios to renegade SPLA soldiers. Timothy
Keller was arrested at gunpoint and marched 26 miles to
an army base.
This was not a case of mistaken identity, but a deliberate
Muslim plot designed to discredit two recognized Christian
leaders and as a consequence have the SPLA do their dirty
work by executing them. This would seriously damage the
SPLAs otherwise favorable image in the West as they
normally respect the Church and protect religious freedom.
It was a win-win situation for the Arab schemers.
The NIF plan was to create doubts about the loyalty of Bishop
Dolli and cast suspicion on Dr. Hammond. In war time the
allegation of treason is so egregious it demands
the death penalty.
There was an added ingredient in this tangled web
tribalism. The Dinka are the largest tribe in the New Sudan.
Earlier in the war they were displaced during Arab raids
across the South. Many settled among the Moru in Moruland.
The Dinka are cattlemen and have virtually destroyed the
Moru farming infrastructure by indiscriminate grazing. As
a majority nation the Dinka have many senior positions in
the army. They resent the Moru objections to their grazing
practices. Since the FF base and mission school are in Moruland,
and Bishop Dolli is Moru, Hammond and Dolli were seen in
a less favorable light by Dinka dignitaries following the
disinformation campaign despite the fact that FF has worked
extensively among the Dinka to their great benefit.
It seemed particularly incredible that Bishop Bullen Dolli
could be accused of collaborating with the Arab Islamic
regime as they had tortured and killed his only brother.
The Muslims tied a rope around his neck and dragged him
for some distance behind a vehicle, then poured gasoline
on his shredded body and set it alight.
Dr. Peter Hammond's many writings and work on behalf of
the suffering Christians in Sudan is well known internationally,
particularly his best-selling book, Faith Under Fire in
Sudan and the award-winning video, Sudan: the Hidden Holocaust.
Last year the Government of Sudan published articles on
their official website stating that, "Peter Hammond
should expect to be bombed when he comes to Sudan. Hammond
should expect to be shot on sight, because his writings
make him an enemy of the State."
After thorough investigations, the security services of
the SPLA concluded that the Bishop and missionary were innocent
of the charges and concluded that they were victims of an
elaborate disinformation campaign, which included some foreigners
in New Sudan. It was difficult to determine the extent to
which the mortal danger was exacerbated by the false and
slanderous accusations made by a disgruntled former Frontline
associate but it was considerable.
The leadership of the SPLA issued orders that Bishop Bullen
Dolli and Dr. Peter Hammond were cleared of all charges
and were henceforth free to travel anywhere in the New Sudan.
SPLA commanders were also instructed to provide them with
every protection.
Six days after their arrest, the missionaries were released.
Bishop Bullen Dolli resumed his ministry in the Diocese
of Lui. Peter Hammond returned to Cape Town in time for
the 20th Anniversary celebrations of Frontline Fellowship
and to launch a new film on Sudan - "Terrorism and
Persecution."
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