The United Nations refugee camps that will be sending 85,000
“displaced persons” to the United States over the next year for
permanent resettlement are infested with jihadists who target and kill
Christian refugees, according to a U.N. aid worker who spoke to a
British newspaper.
The jihadists are sending teams of trained killers into U.N. camps
disguised as refugees to kidnap and kill vulnerable Christians, the Sunday Express reported.
But refugees are terrified to report many of the killings in case
they are targeted next, according to an aid worker who spoke to the
Express on the condition that his name not be used for fear of
reprisals.
The emergence of Islamic hit squads targeting Christians came to
light after one terrorist had second thoughts and renounced jihad after
witnessing Christians helping out other refugees within the camp, the
Express reported.
He then revealed that he had been sent with an Islamist assassin team
from ISIS to eliminate Christians as part of the terrorist group’s
ideological obsession with emptying the Middle East of all Christians.
The aid worker, who works at a U.N. camp in Jordan, told the Express
that the jihadists are also kidnapping young refugee girls to sell as
sex slaves.
He said: “The Muslim gangs come as refugees, but they have their agendas.”
The aid worker told the Christian Post: “The last time I went inside a camp, I had a policeman with me.
“The camps are dangerous because they have IS, Iraqi militias and Syrian militias. It’s another place for gangs.
“They’re killing inside the camps, and they’re buying and selling ladies and even girls.”
WND previously reported in July and again in September,
that while Christians are the most vulnerable of all people in the
Middle East, not many have been going to the U.N. refugee camps because
word is spreading about the dangerous conditions that await them there –
mistreatment and even death at the hands of Muslims placed in positions
of authority by the U.N.
This explains why Muslims make up 97 percent of the Syrian “refugees”
being sent to the U.S. and Europe from U.N. refugee camps. Not only is
there a bias against Christian refugees by the U.S., Britain and other
Western governments, but there are very few Christians in the camps to
start with.
Lord George Carey, who is Britain’s former Archbishop of Canterbury, described the situation last month in an op-ed for the Telegraph.
Carey said accepting refugees from U.N. camps won’t help Syrian
Christians who are being hunted like dogs by their Islamic oppressors,
their property stolen, their men beheaded and their women raped.
While Carey said he welcomes his country’s announcement to take in
22,000 Syrian refugees, the most targeted refugees are being left behind
to face their Islamic killers. The U.S. has committed thus far to
taking at least 11,500 mostly Muslim Syrian refugees through 2016, and
Canada’s new liberal government wants to accept 25,000. The U.S. also
accepts 7,000 to 8,000 Muslim Somali refugees annually from a massive
U.N. refugee camp in Kenya that the Kenyan president alleges has served
as a launching pad for terrorist strikes against Christians in his
country.
“But the frustration for those of us who have been calling for
compassion for Syrian victims for many months is that the Christian
community is yet again left at the bottom of the heap,” Carey wrote.
The ‘Arab Spring’ — which was celebrated by President Obama and other
Western leaders — ultimately unleashed a wave of deadly persecution
against Christians across North Africa and the Middle East. Secular
dictators such as Egypt’s Mubarak, Syria’s Assad and Libya’s Qaddafi
fell out of favor with the West, which supported the religious Muslim
Brotherhood-supported dictators who were waiting in the wings.
“Christians in Syria and Iraq are generally caught in the middle of
these conflicts and find they are targeted by all sides, because they
support democratic reform and are perceived to be sympathetic to the
West,” said George Marlin, chairman of Aid to the Church in Need USA and
author of “Christian Persecutions in the Middle East: A 21st Century Tragedy.”
Destroying the ‘cradle of Christianity’
“Many elements on both sides would not be unhappy if Christians
disappeared from the face of the Middle East and they (the Islamists)
would destroy all the Christian historical sites, the relics and the
documents dating back to the founding of the Church, that are there,” he
told WND. “Peter centered the church in Antioch before he moved it up
to Rome. Syria is the cradle of Christianity.”
He said Christians were generally left alone under Assad and lived
peacefully. “But Islamic Turks slaughtered 200,000 Christians in Syria
during the Ottoman Empire so it’s nothing new.”
As of December 2014, 600,000 Syrian Christians had fled their country
or have been internally displaced, Marlin reports. In Aleppo, more than
65 percent have been forced to leave.
He told WND most Syrian Christians will not go to the U.N. refugee
camps for two reasons. First, they are afraid they will be physically
harmed and, second, they do not want to leave their country.
“The Christians are afraid to go to those camps, because the camps
are basically populated by Muslims, and they’re afraid of retaliation
and harm in these camps,” Marlin said. “So what is happening with the
Christian refugees is the Christian community is basically taking care
of these people, they’re staying in the churches, they’re staying in
Christian homes, and we at Aid to the Church in Need are trying to get
aid to the churches that are housing them.”
He said many rural Syrians have been run off their farms and have
fled to the mountains between Syria and Lebanon, while others have gone
into Lebanon. Many would rather die than abandon their ancient homeland,
but there may soon come a day when they run out of places to flee.
“In Aleppo and elsewhere, Christians who are escaping, they are
staying at Christian homes, churches, places where there is solidarity
so they are not necessarily leaving the country or trying to get into
refugee camps,” he said.
Marlin said the persecution of the Church in Syria has followed the
same pattern as every other country where Islamists have taken over.
“In the eight countries I cover in the book, the tactics are pretty
much the same, with the exception of Saudi Arabia which doesn’t have any
Christians and focuses on harassing Christians there as guest workers,”
he said. “In the other seven countries, the churches are being blown up
on high holy days; the pastors are being abducted and murdered. We’ve
kept these records so people can recognize the pattern.”
‘Horrified’ by Obama response to persecution
He said the response of the Obama administration to the war on Christianity in the Middle East has been abysmal.
“My hope in writing this book was to remind the West that the
unthinkable is real and to jolt the conscience of the West, where too
many people have been putting their heads in the sand, including the
White House,” Marlin said. “I was horrified at the response of the White
House when those Coptic Christians were murdered on the beach in Libya,
specifically because they were Christians, and our president referred
to them as ‘migrant workers from Egypt.’
Marlin believes part of the lack of response comes from the fact that
Europe, and increasingly America, has lost touch with its Christian
roots and thus feel no connection with the persecuted Christians of the
Middle East.
It has been said that “the last acceptable prejudice is against
Christianity,” Marlin said. “And when people like Mrs. Clinton said that
we must change our religious views (on same-sex marriage), that is
where we’re heading. You can practice your religion in your home and
within your church, but not in the public square. So yes, language
matters, culture matters, and we’re seeing a change in the language to
justify actively shutting up of Christians in the public square.”
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2015/10/u-n-refugee-camps-become-hellish- nightmare-for-christians/#Ebv6o9jWEEfyLJ0m.99