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Turkish Believers "Satanically Tortured" Before Being Killed

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  • Turkish Believers "Satanically Tortured" Before Being Killed

    TURKISH BELIEVERS "SATANICALLY TORTURED" BEFORE BEING KILLED

    BosNewsLife, Hungary
    April 26 2007

    WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT, READERS' DISCRETION ADVISED

    ISTANBUL, TURKEY (BosNewsLife)-- There was increased concern
    Thursday, April 26, about the plight of active Christians in Turkey
    after investigators revealed that three evangelical believers were
    "satanically tortured" last week before being killed.

    The influential American human rights group International Christian
    Concern (ICC) with website www.persecution.org told BosNewsLife that
    the circumstances surrounding the deaths of German Tilman Ekkehart
    Geske, 45, and Turkish Christians Necati Aydin, 35, and Ugur Yuksel
    ,32, at the Christian Zirve publishing house were even worse than
    thought.

    ICC, based in Washington DC, said the troubles began on Easter
    Sunday when five of the alleged killers had been to a service that
    Pastor Necati arranged in the eastern town of Malatya, the capital
    of Malatya province.

    The men were reportedly known to local believers as searching for
    the faith in Christ. The suspects, one of whom is the son of a mayor
    in the Province of Malatya, are part of a tarikat, or a group of
    "faithful believers" in Islam, ICC added.

    Tarikat membership is "like a fraternity membership" and means that
    "no one can get into public office without membership" of such
    a group, ICC said. "On the day of the killing, the young Muslim
    men had arranged to meet the Christians at 10:00 am [local time]
    to ostensibly learn more about the Bible. They had gathered guns,
    bread knives, ropes and towels [as] they knew there would be a lot
    of blood, ready for their act of service to Allah," ICC stressed.

    READING BIBLE

    After Necati read a chapter from the Bible the assault reportedly
    began. "The young men tied Ugur, Necati, and Tilman's hands and feet
    to chairs as they videoed their work on their cell phones," ICC said,
    adding that what "followed in the next three hours is beyond belief."

    ICC said the men were "disemboweled, and their intestines sliced up in
    front of their eyes. They were emasculated and watched as those body
    parts were destroyed." The group added that "fingers were chopped off"
    and "their noses and mouths and anuses were sliced open" as part of
    what it called "satanic torture."

    It added that "possibly the worst part was watching as their brothers
    were likewise tortured. Tilman was stabbed 156 times, Necati 99 times
    and Ugur's stabs were too numerous to count."

    Finally, their throats were sliced from ear to ear, and their "heads
    practically decapitated," ICC said.

    Several hours later at 12:30 local time a fellow Christian reportedly
    arrived at the publishing house but discovered that the door was
    locked from the inside. After he called cell phones of the men, Ugur
    apparently answered his phone saying: "We are not at the office. Go
    to the hotel meeting. We are there. We will come there." Yet as Ugur
    spoke he heard in the background weeping and a strange snarling sound,
    ICC said, citing its investigation.

    POLICE INTERVENTION

    After he phoned police the nearest officer arrived in about five
    minutes and pounded on the door shouting: "Police, open up,!" reports
    said.

    Initially the officer apparently believed it was a domestic
    disturbance, but when he heard another snarl and a gurgling moan he
    understood that sound as human suffering, ICC explained. The officer
    "prepared the clip in his gun and tried over and over again to burst
    through the door. One of the frightened assailants unlocked the door
    for the policeman, who entered to find a grisly scene."

    Reports said the attack happened following Muslim protests against
    the distribution of Bibles and other Christian literature by the
    publishing house for which they worked.

    One of the victims, Necati Aydin, a husband and father of two young
    children, was also an actor who reportedly played the role of Jesus
    Christ in a theater production that TURK-7 network aired over the
    Easter holidays.

    DETENTION DEMANDED

    Prosecutors have asked a court to allow jailing 11 suspects, 10 young
    men and a woman, pending trial over the gruesome murder of the three
    Christians. A 12th suspect, allegedly the leader, remains in hospital
    with a serious head injury after jumping from the third-floor office
    of the Christian publishing house in Malatya where the victims were
    killed, to escape arrest.

    At least four of the suspects have reportedly been charged with
    "founding a terrorist organization and murder within the framework of
    the organization." In a first reaction, Tillman's wife publicly forgave
    the those who killed her husband saying "they know not what they do."

    ICC President Jeff King said he was impressed by the "contrast between
    the acts of the killers and the forgiveness of Tillman's wife." He
    said it was "glaring and in the end seems to be at the center of this
    story for us. For in the end, these events serve as a stark reminder
    of the difference between Islam and Christianity."

    He added that, for "the 'faithful' Muslims, following their god meant
    brutally killing three men [with the excuse] "we did this to protect
    Islam". For the faithful Christians, following God meant forgiving
    the men who had tortured and murdered their loved ones."

    The attacks have added to concern among Turkish Christians who comprise
    about 0.2 percent of the mainly Muslim nation of over 71 million
    people. The murders followed the January murder of Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink and the shooting of Italian Roman Catholic
    priest Andrea Santoro in the town of Trabzon in February 2006. (With
    reporting from Turkey).
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