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Monday, February 24, 2014

CAR Muslims take refuge in Catholic church ... would Christians have been afforded the same courtesy in a mosque?


I don't think so!  Muslims don't even allow their own Muslim women access to their mosques, and even when they do they have to sit in the back or hidden away in a cellar-like enclosure.
   
I used to think that the backlash on the blood-thirsty Muslims would begin in Russia. What a surprise that it has started from CAR,  the heart of Africa. Nigeria's Christians  will soon follow in the CAR Christian footsteps as they too have been suffering for years from Muslim atrocities and I am sure by now their patience has run out.  We are seeing the backlash now from the first  two countries ... Myanmar and CAR. What was bound to happen ... has happened, although not in the countries we expected it to happen.  

And, again I ask the question: Why are jihadis from the Muslim diaspora in the West who were lightening quick to make their way to Syria, not finding their way to CAR?  Hah! Black-skinned Muslims are expendable,  aren't they dear muzzies?

From AlJazeera:
....Hundreds of Muslims are seeking refuge in a Catholic Church in the Central African Republic town of Carnot following the killing of at least 70 people in the country's remote southwest.

The Muslims fled to the church after Christian fighters known as the anti-Balaka attacked Guen, about 100km away, earlier this month, said Catholic priest, Father Rigobert Dolongo.

Dolongo told the Associated Press news agency on Monday that he helped bury the bodies of those killed.

At least 27 people were slain in the first day of the attack, while 43 others were killed on the second day, he said.

Ibrahim Aboubakar, 22, said the anti-Balaka stormed Guen and killed his two older brothers after they were heard speaking in Arabic.

"Later that day they rounded up dozens of people and forced them all to lie down on their stomachs. Then they shot them one by one," he said from the church.

Those Muslims still in Guen appealed by telephone for African peacekeepers in Carnot to rescue them, according to two Muslim residents who insisted on anonymity because they feared for their lives.

They also confirmed the heavily armed anti-Balaka were still in control of the village on Tuesday.

However, the local commander for the peacekeeping mission said he needed permission from his supervisors in the capital, Bangui, to go to Guen.....

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