Tendring Topics…….on line
It wasn’t ‘too good to be true’
Regular
blog readers will know that I have been concerned about the fate of Meriem
Ibrahim, the young North Sudanese mother who had been convicted of the ‘heinous
crime’ of abandoning Islam for Christianity (she had, in fact, been brought up
by her Christian mother and had never been a Muslim) and sentenced to death by
hanging. Before being hanged she was to
be flogged with 100 lashes for marrying a Christian and having a child by him. Such marriages are forbidden by Sharia law
and are condemned as ‘adulterous’! At the time of her condemnation she was
heavily pregnant with her second child – a baby girl who was born while her
mother was shackled to the floor of her cell.
Following
world-wide protests an appeal against the sentence was successful but she was
prevented from flying with her family to her husband’s home in the USA on the
pretext of a faulty passport. A fortnight ago a report on BBC tv announced that
the whole family had been allowed to fly to Italy where they had met the Pope
who had congratulated Meriem on her steadfast refusal to abandon her Christian faith,
a course of action that could have earned her freedom. Sadly this report was never confirmed or
taken up by the media – and a search on line by Google discovered no news of
Meriem later than her re-arrest at Khartoum
airport when she had tried to leave the country. I concluded that the news of the family’s
flight to Italy was ‘too good to be true’
and this gloomy opinion was reinforced by a news report that the family had
taken refuge in the United States Embassy in Khartoum and that her father (who
had left her mother to bring up her baby alone!) was urging the reinstatement
of the death sentence.
Home – at last.
The Ibrahim family re-united in the USA . Baby Maya, born in a Sudanese prison cell, is
in her mother’s arms and her toddler son in the care of his Grandpa.
It has now become clear that that early BBC
report was true. The whole family had
clandestinely flown to Italy
with an Italian government minister.
They had met the Pope and Meriem had been congratulated on her refusal
to renounce her faith despite the dire consequences that could have followed
that refusal. It seems too that that
hasty departure from the American Embassy and from North
Sudan , was not a moment too soon.
A lynch mob had been threatening to storm the Embassy and seize its
prey! At a time of bloodshed and
violence and of the persecution of Christians throughout much of the Middle
East and large areas of northern Africa , the
Meriem Ibrahim story is one that has a happy ending!
Latest news reports confirm that Meriem, her husband and two children
have flown to her husband’s home in the USA where they have been given a
heroes’ welcome. It was one story that wasn’t
too good to be true!
Still living with Mum at 21? - and 31?
Members
and supporters of the present government never tire of complaining about the ‘terrible mess that the previous Labour
government left us to clear up’. Well, I was never an enthusiast for New
Labour but the Governor of the Bank of England who has recently retired always
insisted that it was the Bankers and money-lenders, not the politicians, who
were to blame for that mess.
One
of the messes that the New Labour government
inherited from the Thatcher years – and failed to address – was the iniquitous right to buy legislation that compelled
local authorities, but not private landlords, to sell their council owned
houses at a fraction of their market value to sitting tenants Inevitably council houses in pleasant rural
areas were quickly bought up and sold on - often at an enormous profit –
directly this legally became possible.
Equally inevitably, since councils were unable to build houses for letting to replace them, there were
no properties for letting at reasonable rents in many rural villages. Young couples, whose forbears had lived in
that village for generations, found themselves compelled to move away. Many villages consequently became
‘dormitories’, with their inhabitants commuting daily to the nearest town,
doing much of their shopping there, and taking no interest in local life and
local affairs.
Mrs
Thatcher and her successors, in pursuit of their dream of home ownership for all changed public attitudes so that, as Paul
Honeywood, Tendring Council’s ‘housing boss’ told a Clacton Gazette reporter ‘Council
homes are often looked at as a last resort for the unemployed and people in
financial trouble but’ he added, ‘we
are trying to change that perception and offer it as an alternative for those
wanting to set up on their own or start a family’. What Mr Honeywood is urging is in fact, a return to the system that existed and worked
satisfactorily for a century before the advent of Thatcherism – when local authorities,
without interference from national politicians, built houses for letting and
allocated them to those in need. There
was then no stigma attached to ‘living in a council house’. When I was appointed as a Public Health
Inspector by Clacton Council in 1956, my family and I were happy to live in a
Council House in Holland-on-Sea
until, after a few months, we purchased and moved into the bungalow in which I
am living today.
Tendring’s
position is worse than that of other neighbouring local authority areas. In Colchester 6,064 (22 percent) of 20 to 34
year old are still living in the family home, in Braintree 5,770 (28 percent)
and in Tendring 4,801 (37 percent) Typical of such a ‘stay-at-home’ is 22 year
old Natasha Fuller of St Osyth who works full-time as a hairdresser. She told a Gazette reporter, ‘I still
live at home with my parents even though I have a full-time job. I don’t earn enough to save for a mortgage or
rent on my own home while running a car at the same time’.
Shelter representative Campbell Robb told the Gazette ’The clipped-wing generation are finding themselves with no choice but to remain living with mum and dad well into adulthood. And those who aren’t lucky enough to have this option face a lifetime of unstable, expensive, private renting. The government knows that the only way to turn the tide of the housing shortage is to fill the gap between the homes we have and the homes we need’.
And the only
effective way of doing that is to repeal the ‘right to buy’ legislation and – as in the pre-Thatcher past –
encourage local authorities to build the homes their district needs, and to let
them to local people who need a home, without interference from ‘Nanny knows best, dear’ politicians!
.
ISIS is still
with us!
.
The
blood bath in Gaza, the downing of the Malaysian air liner over eastern Ukraine
and the centenary commemoration of World War I have driven ISIS and its
determination to establish an extremist Islamic Caliphate throughout Syria and
Iraq (and that’s just for a start!) from the news headlines during the past week
or so. They’re still there though and
although they don’t seem to have made any progress towards taking Baghdad , they’re
consolidating their strict Islamic rule over the territories that they have
taken and are edging forward whenever they have the opportunity to do so.
A
recent effect of this has been to drive tens of thousands of Christian Iraqis from their
homes in areas where the Christian faith has flourished for centuries. Many in northern Iraq had been protected by the semi-independent
Kurds but their protectors have now been driven out and the new extreme Islamic
regime has offered the choice of death, conversion to their own extreme version
of Islam, or a crippling tax payable by all non-Muslims. nearly one hundred thousand have fled and are now trapped on a barren mountain without shelter, food or water.. They
urgently need the help of their Christian brothers and sisters in Europe and elsewhere. ISIS has changed its name and
now likes to be called simply IS, standing for Islamic State. Its members haven’t changed their nature though.
Successive
British governments’ no-doubt-well-intentioned meddling in Iraq, Libya and
Syria has prepared the ground and earned recruits for extremists like IS and Al
Qaeda.The Christian faith is being eradicated from the very area that gave it birth, and the whole of the Middle East and large areas of Africa, are now areas in
which Britons visit, live and work in danger of their lives!
I
wonder if Tony Blair and his successors are proud of the results of their activities?
Later News
Since I wrote the above, only a day or two ago, events have moved quickly. The USA and the UK governments have heeded the call for help of the thousands of Christian Iraqi civilians in their barren mountain refuge. We are co-operating with the Americans in dropping water, food and the means of providing shelter to those refugees and the USA is also carrying out air strikes on the IS forces, though both governments insist that there will be no ground forces involved.
I applaud wholeheartedly the provision of humanitarian aid though, quite apart from the morality of the action, I doubt very much whether air strikes alone can be expected either to make it possible for the refugees to go peacefully to their former home free from persecution, or to pass through territory IS holds to a place of safety. Obviously the present situation cannot continue. We can't supply those refugees indefinitely - and winter is approaching. I wish that I could envisage a happy non-violent ending to the present situation. I can't and, if I'm to be absolutely honest, I can't imagine a violent one either.
I hope and pray that someone can!
Since I wrote the above, only a day or two ago, events have moved quickly. The USA and the UK governments have heeded the call for help of the thousands of Christian Iraqi civilians in their barren mountain refuge. We are co-operating with the Americans in dropping water, food and the means of providing shelter to those refugees and the USA is also carrying out air strikes on the IS forces, though both governments insist that there will be no ground forces involved.
I applaud wholeheartedly the provision of humanitarian aid though, quite apart from the morality of the action, I doubt very much whether air strikes alone can be expected either to make it possible for the refugees to go peacefully to their former home free from persecution, or to pass through territory IS holds to a place of safety. Obviously the present situation cannot continue. We can't supply those refugees indefinitely - and winter is approaching. I wish that I could envisage a happy non-violent ending to the present situation. I can't and, if I'm to be absolutely honest, I can't imagine a violent one either.
I hope and pray that someone can!
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