Jesus' Coming Back

Muslim Judge Orders Christian Church Property Seized And Given Over To Muslim Businessmen, And Now Is Trying To Steal The Land From At Least 60 More Christians

Since April 2017, we have been following a story in Sudan, where Muslim businessmen were attempting to use the court system to steal a Christian school from a local church (see here, here, and here). The Christians have also been attacked by the local Muslims, and at least one church elder has died from the conflict. The judge, who is also a Muslim, just issued a verdict in which he sided with the businessmen and has forced not only the church to give up the property, but the property of 60 other Christians in the area according to a report:

An Islamist judge in Sudan upheld the eviction of two pastors from their church-owned homes while 60 other Christians have been summoned to court over their refusal to relinquish property, sources said.

Judge Adam Tahir Haj Adam on Dec. 3 rejected an appeal of the Aug. 15 eviction of the Rev. Yahia Abdelrahim Nalu, Sudan Presbyterian Evangelical Church (SPEC) moderator, and the Rev. Sidiq Abdalla, a SPEC pastor, from their homes. In what Christians in Sudan believe is a campaign to take over church property, Adam ruled that Muslim businessman Hisham Hamad Al-Neel should take over the houses.

“All appeals presented are rejected, and implantation of court order should continue,” the court order read.

The two pastors and their families remain homeless since police raided their houses on Aug. 15 and evicted them. Pastor Abdalla has two children, ages 8 and 10, and Pastor Nalu has a 1-year-old boy. The SPEC leaders have presented another appeal to the high court, and a ruling is expected before the end of the year.

More than 60 church leaders are facing charges in various courts in Khartoum for refusal to hand over church lands and estates to Al-Neel, sources said. A group of 25 SPEC leaders on Nov. 28 appeared in a court in Omdurman, across the Nile River from Khartoum, after Al-Neel accused them of refusing to hand over church property that he claimed to own, they said.

Al-Neel is attempting to take over SPEC properties in Khartoum and Khartoum Bahri (Khartoum North). He is the Muslim businessman behind nearly all the cases filed to obtain church property, a source who requested anonymity told Morning Star News.

“Almost all the cases were opened by Hisham,” the source said.

The judge rejected the petition of the two evicted SPEC pastors even though the Aug. 15 eviction order referred to another house, No. 567, rather than that of one of the pastors, No. 772, a source said. The order does not name the occupants to be evicted, only the properties.

SPEC leaders said they believe the ruling could result in the imminent demolition of at least one of the church-owned houses.

“We need prayers from everyone,” Pastor Nalu said.

Among those on trial over SPEC properties is church elder Yohanna Tia, who appeared at a hearing on Nov. 28 after he was accused of attacking someone during an April raid by police and a mob on an evangelical school. Al-Neel also opened that case. (source)

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