Re: William C Biggs' handlers linked to Al-Queda

From: Dr. Jai Maharaj (usenet_at_mantra.com)
Date: 07/05/04


Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2004 17:54:51 GMT


>> "William C Biggs" <william@amarillomed.com> <reddy@amarillomed.com> is
>> handled by Baptists, and Baptists have been linked to Al-Queda terrorists:
>>
>> BSA Provider Network Physicians
>>
>> William Biggs, M.D. (806)358-8331
>> 1215 S. Coulter 400
>> Amarillo, TX 79106
>>
>> Amarillo Medical Specialists
>> Endocrinology
>>
>> Baptist St. Anthony's Health System Is Committed To
>> Providing Quality Healthcare In Christian Love, Service
>> And Dignity.
>>
>> A co-ministry of CHRISTUS Health and Baptist Community
>> Services
>>
>> Baptist St. Anthony's Health System
>>
>> http://www.bsahs.org/pnetwork/
>>
>>
>> [ Subject: Christian-Muslim terrorism: BAPTISTS LINKED TO AL-QUEDA
>> [ From: Dr. Jai Maharaj
>> [ Date: 12 Jan 2003
>>
>> Facts about terrorist Islam and Muslims
>> http://www.flex.com/~jai/satyamevajayate
>>
>> Militant reveals ISI-Bangla links to militancy in NE
>>
>> PTI
>> The Times of India
>> Sunday, January 12, 2003
>>
>> Indraprasth - The north eastern region of the country is
>> sitting on a powder-keg as Pakistan's ISI has been able
>> to make substantial inroads into the region by covertly
>> using the Bangladesh territory for carrying out its
>> operation.
>>
>> A report submitted to the government said the arrest of
>> vice-president of banned National Democratic Front of
>> Bodoland Dhiren Boro in Sikkim on January one this year
>> led to more information about how the ISI was using the
>> Bangladesh territory to carry out subversive activities
>> in the north eastern region.
>>
>> During the interrogation, Boro, who was arrested along
>> with his wife and two bodyguards from Gangtok on a tip-
>> off to Intelligence agencies, said that he had been
>> holding important posts of NDFB.
>>
>> While stating that his outfits's President Rajan Daimary
>> and Publicity Secretary B Erakdao were at present in
>> Bangladesh, the arrested militant revealed that Daimary
>> had also visited Pakistan in 1998 at the instance of a
>> Naga outfit and he received political and administrative
>> training there from the ISI.
>>
>> Boro said that Daimary had also arranged training of the
>> 10 NDFB cadres along with Naga outfit in 1999 in
>> Pakistan. The militants, who were trained in use of
>> explosives and weapons, had gone to Islamabad via Dhaka.
>>
>> The revelation of the militant also highlighted the fact
>> that his outfit was in liaison with a Naga outfit for
>> supply of arms, ammunition and explosives to his group in
>> Bangladesh against cash payment.
>>
>> Another important cadre of NDFB Amarendra Daimary alias
>> Organg, who was arrested in Jalpaiguri in West Bengal
>> along with arms and ammunition and Rs 12 lakh, revealed
>> during interrogation that the money was being taken to
>> Cox Bazar in Bangladesh for purchase of arms and
>> ammunition. The Bangladeshi agencies including army and
>> police do not disturb the NDFB cadres in the camps
>> located at Alikadam in Chittagong district, the arrested
>> militant said.
>>
>> The report said that lately ISI had been channelising
>> some of its anti-India operational activities from
>> Bangladesh soil with a view to destablising the North
>> Eastern region of the country.
>>
>> Islamic fundamentalist organisations of Bangladesh
>> including Islamic Chatra Shibir and Jamaat-e-Islami,
>> offer a hospitable functional environment to the ISI, the
>> report said quoting disclosures by ISI agents arrested in
>> North East.
>>
>> The cropping up of some Muslim fundamentalist groups in
>> the North East was a cause of some worry as fanatics in
>> Bangladesh were providing them with weapons and all other
>> logistic help, the report said.
>>
>> The earlier arrests in the North East including that of a
>> Kashmiri militant hailing from Kupwara district of north
>> Kashmir set the alarm bells ringing about growing
>> activities of ISI in the country and existence of its
>> extensive network in Assam, it said.
>>
>> The interrogation report said that around 30 youths from
>> the region had received training in ISI training camps
>> and that they had either used Pakistani or Bangladeshi
>> passports to travel to that place, the report said.
>>
>> Read the complete news at:
>>
>> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/cms.dll/html/comp/articleshow?artid=3415367
>> 7
>>
>> Jai Maharaj
>> http://www.mantra.com/jai
>> Om Shanti

 
> Forwarded message
>
> [ Subject: American Baptists caught red-handed in Naga insurgency
> [ From: ssmokin@my-deja.com (ssmokin@my-deja.com)
> [ Date: July 4, 2000
>
> Naga insurgency has been supported by International
> baptists, communist china and islamic pakistan and
> islamic bangladesh to bleed India. These baptists have
> joined hands with the devil
>
> International Ministries - Nagaland Crisis January 1998
>
> Nagaland, an isolated area tucked in the mountainous,
> jungle covered northeast corner of India near the Burmese
> border. The area (is) home to a dozen separate tribes,
> each with its own dialect and often with a history of
> headhunting. Tensions among Nagaland's tribes, and an
> armed guerrilla movement bent on independence from India,
> (make) it a highly unstable area. Excerpt from Billy
> Graham's Autobiography, Just As I Am
>
> Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ: We need your help.
> Many of you may know the story of the Naga people, former
> headhunters who, through the efforts of American Baptist
> missionaries, have become a state which boasts of a
> population that is 90 percent Christian--with 90 percent
> of those Christians proclaiming to be Baptist.
>
> Mission Done Right The people of Nagaland consider their
> literacy rate 40 times higher than the rest of India.
> They have no hunger and little unemployment. They
> attribute their marked differences from the rest of India
> to their commitment to Christianity. I was present this
> past November, along with a delegation of American
> Baptists, to celebrate 125 years since E.W. Clark, our
> first missionary to India, brought the Gospel to the Naga
> people. Nagaland is a story of mission done right. Less
> than a dozen missionaries planted the seeds for what
> today is an incredibly strong church. All Naga Baptists
> self-support their pastors, are self-governing and
> believe wholly in self propagation--bringing the Gospel
> to all of Nagaland. In fact, 125 new
> missionaries/evangelists were commissioned by the Nagas
> at the 125th anniversary celebration. I marvel at the
> Baptist church in Nagaland as we struggle (successfully,
> because of your support) to appoint 33 new missionaries
> in one year.
>
> For 50 years the Naga people have struggled for
> independence from India. Nagaland is made up of numerous
> Naga tribes, all of which, because of their Mongolian
> descent, have more in common with Burmese tribes, their
> neighbors to the east, than they do with India. Like many
> indigenous groups in the area, the Nagas' land was
> arbitrarily split by colonial powers into what they
> consider false regions, separating them from other Naga
> groups in, for example, Burma.
>
> Despite their valiant efforts, Nagaland remains an
> occupied territory. The Indian government empowers its
> soldiers to arrest, shoot and even kill at will anyone
> suspected of subversive actions against the government.
> It is said to be the most unreported area of civil
> conflict in the second half of this century, with
> estimates of up to 300,000 casualties. We don't hear
> about these casualties because the Indian Government has
> deemed Nagaland to be a "restricted" zone, meaning few
> people from the outside are given permission to visit. I
> have, by the good will of the Indian government, been
> granted entry five times--even when others were not given
> permits. In one mountainous village, I was reported to be
> the first Western man ever to visit. Because I am one of
> the few Westerners permitted to visit Nagaland, I feel a
> profound burden to share their story with the rest of the
> world. In fact, they have asked me to speak clearly to
> the rest of the world, even at the risk of being denied
> future entry to their country.
>
> Underground Conflict Several underground groups have
> emerged to resist India's occupation of Nagaland and the
> overwhelming presence of Indian soldiers. Because
> Nagaland is made up of so many distinctive tribes, each
> with a distinctive culture and ideology, each tribe has
> its own understanding of how the fight for independence
> should be conducted.
>
> All the underground groups are led by and made up of
> Christians, predominantly Baptists. They claim to use
> peaceful measures to bring about change and to retaliate
> only in self-defense. However, when an Indian soldier is
> injured or killed, his comrades frequently retaliate on
> the civilian population. There are well-documented cases
> of Naga women being raped or assaulted, crops being
> destroyed and women and children dying in concentration
> camps of malnutrition, torture and forced labor. The
> Indian government has used the tribal diversity to its
> advantage, fronting killings and placing the blame on one
> of the insurgent groups, pitting one tribal group against
> another. In recent history, the fighting between the
> underground groups has been more pronounced than the
> fighting against the Indian government. What makes this
> most tragic is that this fighting, and often times
> bloodshed, is among Christian brothers.
>
> What Does This Have To Do With Your Church? On several
> occasions, I have met personally, and prayed with, the
> leadership of each of the underground organizations. They
> have sought me out for spiritual guidance and counseling-
> -not because of my wisdom, but because of the respect
> they have for their rich history and spiritual roots
> embedded in American Baptist Churches. It is a humbling
> thought that I stand in the shadow of the great
> missionaries that have come before me. As American
> Baptists, we have an obligation to stand in solidarity
> with our Naga Christian sisters and brothers because of
> our history together. No one else has the same connection
> with the Naga church as we do, and we have all but
> forgotten the Naga people. They are the best mission
> story never told.
>
> But this story, without divine intervention, may have a
> tragic end. I believe these underground leaders are
> devoted Christians wrought with frustration for their
> people, but they are also looking for a peaceful avenue
> to freedom. Many Christian leaders pleaded with me to use
> the occasion of the 125 Year Celebration of Christianity
> in Nagaland as an opportunity to speak out against the
> violence and call for reconciliation among the Naga
> people. I challenged the more than 120,000 people in
> attendance to stand if they would no longer tolerate the
> violence inflicted upon innocent people. We then joined
> in a mass prayer, each person praying in his or her own
> language. I am told that over a thousand underground
> soldiers were in attendance, and all of them stood as a
> sign of their commitment to stop the bloodshed. As a
> result, God has continued to work in the hearts of the
> Naga people. Up until the time of the 125th anniversary
> celebration there was one Indian soldier for every eight
> Naga civilians. However, to allow foreigners like myself
> and the other delegates to attended the 125th
> celebration, a special cease-fire agreement was signed
> between the underground groups and the Indian government.
> Some of the soldiers were removed, and I am happy to
> report that there has not been one shot fired since the
> celebration event. The cease-fire agreement has held.
> Steps toward unity have progressed. The Naga people see
> the celebration event as a watershed moment for them.
> They believe that peace will prevail. Nagas' New Slogan:
> "We want a solution, not an election."
>
> In both a phenomenally encouraging movement toward unity
> within the Nagas and a nonviolent protest against the
> Indian government, Naga tribal leaders have unanimously
> signed the enclosed accord, which calls for a boycott of
> the Monday, February 23, election of Indian government
> officials who primarily serve the purposes of the Indian
> government rather than those of the Naga people. Every
> village will display a white flag and every Naga is
> requested to wear white clothing on election day as a
> symbolic declaration of support for a just peace.
>
> What Can You Do Please ask your congregations for three
> things:
>
> My brothers and sisters. We are the voice for Nagaland to
> the outside world. The tragedy for the Nagas is that
> India controls all information coming from Nagaland.
> Outsiders are kept out of the area so that the oppression
> and persecution of the Naga people perpetrated by the
> Indian government are unpublicized. The Naga people need
> our support for a peaceful resolution to their plight.
>
> The Naga churches will spend Sunday, February 22, in
> prayer for the elections they are boycotting the next
> day. They are peacefully protesting what they consider to
> be a "puppet government." Please make Sunday, February
> 22, a special day of prayer where we join our sisters and
> brothers in Nagaland in their prayers for a peaceful
> freedom. Please pray specifically for the end of fighting
> among the Nagas and for them to show the whole world
> that, because of Christ in their lives, they live in
> peace.
>
> Please pray for an end to the human rights violations as
> a result of the occupation of Nagaland by India.
>
> Please contact your local papers and radio and television
> stations, and ask them to carry a story about the
> elections and the Naga perspective on the issues,
> emphasizing the human rights violations not being
> reported because of the Indian government's suppression
> of information. I am enclosing a copy of a press release
> written by the Baptist Peace Fellowship which accurately
> outlines the issues. I would encourage you to use this
> release with your local media contacts. We would like our
> Naga sisters and brothers to know that we are praying for
> them and that we support them. They have urged us to be
> their prayer support and believe that it is the only way
> they will find reconciliation.
>
> My dear friends, we owe a tremendous amount of gratitude
> to the missionaries who have come before us and given us
> a sterling reputation as a people of prayer. Let us
> continue to maintain our reputation as a people united in
> our efforts to see the whole world come to know Jesus
> Christ and to live in peace.
>
> In the Power of the Gospel,
>
> Dr. John A. Sundquist
> Executive Director, International Ministries
>
> International Ministries
>
> End of forwarded message
>
> Jai Maharaj
> http://www.mantra.com/jai
> Om Shanti

[ Subject: Baptists and Naga terrorists - part 2
[ From: ssmokin@my-deja.com (ssmokin@my-deja.com)
[ Date: July 4, 2000

International Ministries - Nagaland Crisis
February 2, 1998

The following is a news release that you are welcome to
use, in discussing this issue your congregations on
Sunday, or in newsletters and announcements. It is a call
to action following up on our media initiative just prior
to last week's Indian elections. Also, please feel free
to send the release to local media in your area.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: John Sundquist, International Ministries, (610) 768-2200

AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH LEADERSHIP CALLS ON MEMBERS
WORLDWIDE TO TAKE UP CAUSE OF OPPRESSED NAGALAND
CHRISTIANS IN INDIA

Presses Letter Campaign to Indian Leaders for
Negotiations with Naga Insurgents In Wake of Their
Successful Election Boycott, Peaceful Demonstration Feb.
22, 23

Church Also Seeks Support in U.S. Congress

VALLEY FORGE, Pa., Feb. 26, 1998 - The leadership of the
American Baptist Churches USA today called on church
members and human rights supporters worldwide to take up
the cause of the Naga people of northeast India, a 90
percent Christian land that has seen 300,000 killed in a
50-year civil war with the Indian government and among
internal factions.

The Baptist Peace Fellowship urged that letters be sent
to Indian Prime Minister Shri I K Gujral and to Indian
embassies in the U.S. and Canada asking that Gujral make
good on his unfulfilled promise of a year ago to
negotiate their demands for self-determination with Naga
Christian insurgents.

The Baptists' call to action comes in the wake of the
Nagas' overwhelmingly successful and non-violent
demonstration earlier this week in their Indian homeland.
On Monday, all but 2 percent of voters in Nagaland
boycotted Indian parliamentary elections. The day before,
hundreds of thousands wore white, displayed white banners
and prayed in churches "for a solution, not an election."

American Baptist leaders also have begun contacting
members of Congress who have pushed to tie limits on U.S.
aid to India to improvements in its human rights record
with Christians in Nagaland, Sikhs in Punjab and Muslims
in Kashmir, as well as with those in Congress backing a
bill to monitor government persecution around the world.
"As grateful beneficiaries of religious and political
freedom here in America and as the church that first
brought the Christian faith to Nagaland 125 years ago, we
believe we must act now to bring to light the tragic but
still hope-filled story of this people isolated from the
global community," said John Sundquist, executive
director of American Baptist Churches International
Ministries. "We must also ask the government of India why
it cannot try to find a peaceful political solution to
the Nagas' aspirations for identity and freedom."

Nagaland, a hilly and jungle region encompassing parts of
several Indian states and Myanmar (formerly Burma) near
the Chinese border, is home to some 2 million indigenous
people of Mongol ancestry who once practiced head
hunting. Over 125 years, American Baptists have seen 90
percent of the Naga population convert to Christianity.
The people's literacy rate is four times that of the rest
of India.

With the end of British colonial rule, the region was
politically subdivided. The newly independent Indian
government reneged on promises from Mahatma Gandhi (soon
after, assassinated) and India's eventual first prime
minister Jawaharlal Nehru that Nagaland would not be a
part of India against Naga wishes and, eventually annexed
it. Just under 1 million Nagas live in the government-
imposed Nagaland state of India.

Insisting that they have no ethnic, cultural or
historical ties to India, the Naga people have been
embroiled in a low-level civil war with India since 1947,
including several periods of brutal oppression by the
Indian military. Up to 300,000 Nagas have been killed
over 50 years, largely at the hands of Indian troops but
also in fighting among hostile Naga Christian factions.

Today, Nagaland is under virtual marshal law, with one
Indian soldier for every eight Naga residents. But a
tenuous cease-fire agreed to between the government and
most Naga factions has largely held since last year and
been extended beyond this week's election.

The Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America has been
mediating internal differences among the Nagas, and a
coalition led by the Naga Baptist Church Council recently
forged a "Peace Agenda for Nagalim" which called for all
armed groups to continue honoring the cease-fire, the
beginning of government-promised negotiations with Naga
insurgents, a postponement of the Feb. 23
parliamentary/state assembly elections in Nagaland and,
failing that, a Naga boycott of the election and non-
violent demonstration in support of a "just peace."

The government went ahead with the Feb. 23 election, in
which an uncontested slate of candidates from the ruling
Congress Party was elected to the state assembly. There
were two deaths in an isolated incident and some
incidents of ballot box theft, but Naga leaders' fears of
large-scale military reprisals and possible retaliation
against those who decided to vote failed to materialize,
they believe due to good will on both sides and the
people's enthusiastic acceptance of the Naga "Peace
Agenda."

Said Nagaland Baptist leader Dr. Wati Aier of his
people's pre-election demonstration: "It was truly a
'White Day.' For the Nagas, who have never spoken through
symbolic acts, this signified the dreams of young and old
for a lasting peace."

The American Baptist Church's call for a letter-writing
campaign targeting Indian leaders was sent to pastors in
5,700 congregations, representing 1.6 million
parishioners in the United States and Canada. They call
on others concerned about human rights and people's
freedom to join them.

  ###

[Things American Baptists can do to support the Nagas'
struggle for a just peace follow]

In addition to offering them prayers, those concerned
about the Nagas may write to:

1) In the U.S., send your hopes for justice and peace in
Nagaland to: His Excellency Naresh Chandra, Embassy of
India, 2107 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D.C. 20008,
or fax to (202) 939-7027.

2) In Canada, send to His Excellency Rajani Kant Verma,
The High Commission of India, 10 Springfield Road,
Ottawa, ON K1M IC9 Canada, or fax to (613) 744-0913.

3) From outside the U.S. and Canada, or in addition to
the above, write to Prime Minister Shri I.K. Gujral, G-
13, Maharani Bagh, New Delhi, 110 065 India, or fax to
011-91-11-682-1718.

The Baptist Peace Fellowship suggests the following
points:

a.) Indicate that you are aware of the suffering in
Nagaland and that you support the "Agenda for Peace in
Nagalim" process.

b.) Express your support of a negotiated peace
settlement.

c.) Note the special prayers being offered in your
congregation and in other congregations across the U.S.
and Canada.

d.) Offer your thanks to the Indian government for the
cease-fire agreement in Nagaland, and encourage them to
continue making every available attempt to reach a non-
violent settlement of the conflict in Nagaland. (Please
do not berate or use antagonistic language, as this will
have the reverse effect of what is needed.)

International Ministries

End of forwarded message

Jai Maharaj
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti



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