News

SUDAN, February 14, 2003 (LifeSiteNews.com) – WorldNetDaily reports today that an evangelical relief group has exposed a recent mass killing of about 3,000 mostly Christian civilians in the Sudan. The country’s radical Islamist government is the likely culprit as it continues its almost 15 years bloody Jihad against the country’s minorities.  The Christian group, called Servant’s Heart, included Mel Middleton, president of Alberta based Freedom Quest International. Middleton is fondly remembered by veteran Toronto pro-life activists for his deep commitment to save the lives of the weakest and most vulnerable persons.  While he lived in Toronto in the 1980’s he was very active in pro-life efforts to close down a Toronto abortuary and was one of the pioneers of active evangelical involvement in the abortion issue in Canada.  The U.S. State Department has forwarded the findings of the Servant’s Heart group to the international Civilian Protection and Monitoring Team assigned to report on violations of the March 2002 Sudan Peace Pact.  See the WorldNetDaily story https://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=31033   See previous Interim story UN irresponsibility has tragic results in the Sudan https://www.lifesitenews.com/interim/1999/aug/20unirresp.html   Frontpage magazine article reveals more on Sudan situation https://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=6099

Comments

Commenting Guidelines

LifeSiteNews welcomes thoughtful, respectful comments that add useful information or insights. Demeaning, hostile or propagandistic comments, and streams not related to the storyline, will be removed.

LSN commenting is not for frequent personal blogging, on-going debates or theological or other disputes between commenters.

Multiple comments from one person under a story are discouraged (suggested maximum of three). Capitalized sentences or comments will be removed (Internet shouting).

LifeSiteNews gives priority to pro-life, pro-family commenters and reserves the right to edit or remove comments.

Comments under LifeSiteNews stories do not necessarily represent the views of LifeSiteNews.