Another Hindu militant group on rise in Nepal?

Kathmandu, June 6 (IANS) A year after a militant Hindu group came into prominence by engineering a bomb attack on a church in Kathmandu valley that killed three women, another such group is on the rise, seeking to restore Hinduism as Nepal’s state religion, claims a prominent doctor who was a kidnap victim.

For more than a fortnight, Bhaktaman Shrestha, executive director at the B.P. Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital in Nepal’s southern Chitwan district, had grabbed headlines in Nepal after he disappeared last month while returning home from hospital.

The disappearance fuelled nationwide protests by the medical fraternity; and the government as well as the opposition Maoist party formed two separate probe panels to unravel the mystery.

Last week, the missing doctor’s car and briefcase were found in two different locations, giving rise to fears about his safety.

Then miraculously, the doctor, a Maoist sympathiser, reappeared Saturday, claiming he was abducted by a Hindu party that sought to make its presence felt through his abduction.

According to Shrestha, he was kidnapped by the Nepal Hindu Janata Party, a new outfit that has branches in 18 of Nepal’s 75 districts and an army of over 4,000.

It is seeking to re-establish Hinduism as Nepal’s state religion four years after parliament declared the world’s only Hindu kingdom secular.

A haggard and unkempt looking Shrestha, who wept publicly, also told the media he was kidnapped at gunpoint and kept blindfolded throughout his 18-day captivity though his captors treated him well and even provided him medicine for his migraine.

The claim about a Hindu militant group comes a year after an underground organisation, the Nepal Defence Army (NDA), caused a bomb to go off at the oldest Catholic church in Kathmandu valley, followed by threats to Christians and Muslims to leave Nepal or face dire consequences.

However, since the arrest of the NDA mastermind, Ram Prasad Mainali, as well as the woman who police say hid the bomb in the church, the attacks on religious minorities have stopped.

A parliamentary party, the Rastriya Prajatantra Party (Nepal) and Hindu groups like Shiv Sena Nepal and Vishwa Hindu Mahasangh have been seeking the restoration of Hinduism as the state religion but none have advocated violence so far.

RPP-Nepal is seeking a referendum and conducting campaigns to muster support for a Hindu monarchy.

The released doctor’s claim about a new militant Hindu party has been greeted with heavy scepticism by the media.

On Sunday, the mainstream dailies accused the doctor of being part of a cover-up exercise to steer away suspicion from the real culprits.

A national daily as well as Nepal’s Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal blame the Maoists for the abduction though the former guerrillas have been denying any involvement in the disappearance.

However, in the past, the Maoists abducted and thrashed to death a businessman who was said to be close to them, long after they had signed a peace agreement and pledged to renounce violence.

Whole communities hacked to death in massacres

Nigerian authorities have begun arresting suspects connected with the massacre of around 500 people in the central region of Jos.

Government officials in Jos say at least 500 people were slaughtered over the weekend when predominantly Christian villages were attacked by gangs using machetes.

Witnesses have described seeing whole communities hacked to death.

It is reported that most of those who died were women and children, who had tried to flee but were caught in animal traps and fishing nets.

It is believed this was a revenge attack prompted by the massacre of hundreds of people in the same area in January.

Jos has a long history of violence between Christians and Muslims.

Government troops have been sent to the area, while around 100 people have already been arrested.

Mass graves are being dug to bury the victims.

Nigeria’s national security adviser has been replaced in the wake of the violence.

Hindus urge Obama to visit Hindu temple also in case of rotation of churches

Nevada, July 7 (ANI): Hindus urged US President Barack Obama to put a Hindu temple also on his list, if possible, in case he decided to attend a number of different churches in rotation.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that President Obama was most welcome to visit any Hindu temple he selected in/around Washington DC. A report quoted President Obama, while discussing handling church in Washington DC, as “…We may choose, rather than to join just one church, to rotate and attend a number of different churches.”

Zed, who is president of Universal Society of Hinduism, applauded President Obama for including “Hindus” in his inaugural address on January 20 in Washington DC, when he said, “We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus – and non-believers”.

Again, in his address to Esperanza National Hispanic Prayer Breakfast and Conference in Washington DC on July 19, President Obama said: “So as we join in prayer, we remember that this is a nation of Christians and Muslims and Jews and Hindus and non-believers.” Zed commended Obama for recognizing Hindus and for his inclusiveness approach.

Rajan Zed pointed out that serious and honest interfaith dialogue was the need of the hour. And we all knew that religion comprised much more than our own particular tradition/experience. In our shared pursuit for the truth, we could learn from one another and thus could arrive nearer to the truth, Zed stressed.

Zed offered Obama wholehearted Hindu support in his worldwide efforts in the areas of human improvement, peace, ecological responsibility, social and economic development, etc.

Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about one billion adherents and moksha (liberation) is its ultimate goal. There are over two millions Hindus in United States of America. (ANI)

U.S. warns of possible attack on embassies in Nigeria

The U.S. Embassy in Nigeria warned on Sunday of a possible attack against diplomatic missions in Lagos, the commercial capital of Africa’s biggest oil producer.

In a message to U.S. citizens living in Nigeria, the embassy said it had received reports of a possible strike against missions located close to the U.S. Consulate General in Lagos, situated in the exclusive Victoria Island neighbourhood.

“U.S. Mission Nigeria has received reports about a possible attacks against diplomatic missions in Lagos located on Walter Carrington Crescent,” the message said.

Nigerian police increased their vigilance in the neighbourhood and called on U.S. citizens to report any suspicious activity.

Nigeria is the world’s eighth biggest exporter of crude oil which supplies the United States and China.

Militants in the southern Niger Delta, the heartland of its oil industry, have carried out regular strikes against installations belonging to oil giants including U.S. firms.

The main militant group in the region, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), dissociated itself from the threat.

“Our struggle is a just one and our enemies are not the good people of America,” it said in a statement.

The U.S. embassy message gave no details of the nature of the reports it had received regarding the possible attack in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation divided roughly equally between Christians and Muslims.

But it said that U.S. government facilities worldwide remained in a state of heightened alert because of the threat of violence against Americans and U.S. interests.

Pope lauds Christian and Muslim coexistence in Cameroon

Pope lauds Christian and Muslim coexistence in Cameroon Yaounde – Pope Benedict XVI on Thursday held up the peaceful coexistence of Christians and Muslims in Cameroon as an example to the rest of Africa as he met leaders of Cameroon’s Muslim minority.

Benedict, on the third day of his first trip to Africa as pontiff, said that genuine religion “rejects all forms of violence and totalitarianism” and praised Cameroon for avoiding the religious strife that has blighted neighbouring Nigeria.

“May the enthusiastic cooperation of Muslims, Catholics and other Christians in Cameroon be a beacon to other African nations of the enormous potential of an interreligious commitment to peace, justice and the common good,” he said.

Muslims comprise almost one quarter of the population of Cameroon, with Roman Catholics accounting for almost another 30 per cent.

After meeting the Muslim leaders, the pontiff was due to say mass in Yaounde’s Amadou Ahidjo stadium, where an estimated 60,000 people were awaiting him. Thousands more were locked outside.

The mass was scheduled to last several hours.

Benedict on Wednesday met bishops to lay down his priorities for the church in Cameroon, but his visit has largely been overshadowed by controversy over remarks he made on the plane while travelling to Cameroon.

Both France and Germany criticized Benedict’s statement that condoms actually aggravate the problem of HIV/AIDS.

“Such statements are a danger to public health policies and the protection of human life,” French foreign affairs ministry spokesman Eric Chevallier told journalists in Paris on Wednesday. “The condom is an important element in the fight against the spread of AIDS.”

Campaigners also blasted the pontiff for being out of touch with the modern world.

Benedict is due to travel to Angola on Friday before returning to the Vatican on March 23, thus closing his first papal visit to Africa.

The late Pope John Paul II visited Africa 16 times – more visits than he made to any other continent.

In contrast, Benedict’s only visit to the continent where the Catholic Church is growing the fastest, was as a cardinal, to the Congolese capital Kinshasa in 1987. (dpa)