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P.O Box 74, Newlands, |
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May 2002 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 ITMI and 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. 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. ITMIs Timothy Keller
was arrested at gunpoint and marched 26 miles to an army base. (See IN
TOUCH MONTHLY Feb. 02) 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. 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.
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