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2010 :
Ramadan and Provocation in the U.S.A.
Bekasi Indonesia : Jihad threat level high
Why is Morocco suddenly deporting foreign Christians?
Palestinian leadership incite terror as 2000 Fatah defect to Hezballah
Jos Again
Nigeria: Why is Jos such a tinderbox?
Jos, Nigeria: explosive situation needs defusing
Burma (Myanmar): Praying for God's Intervention
2009 :
North Caucasus (Southern Russia) Church Struggles Amidst Terror
United Kingdom: Religious Liberty Fading Fast
Pakistan: Islamic Fundamentalists Target Christians
Laos: persecution of foreign religion
Conflict and Disillusionment within Islam
Sudan: Bleak Future for Christians as War Looms
Pakistan: Blasphemy Laws & Impunity Must End
Iraq: bombing of churches sends dark message
Pakistan: 'Reconciliation' But Not Justice
Egypt: impunity fuels persecution
Vietnam: Greater Destruction as Persecution Escalates
How to Pray for Iran
Vigilant Intercession and a Provident God
Lebanon: pivotal elections spotlight Christians
Iran: Imprisoned Christian Women in Peril
Nigeria: The Battle for Shariah Supremacy
Somalia, Kenya & The Dispersed Somalis
Kyrgyzstan: putting the repressive religion law in context
Uzbekistan: Church Learning to Overcome amidst Persecution
2008 :

Sudan: hope lingers but war threatens
- A call to pray for the Sudan

Indonesia: Islamisation & Polarisation
Maldives: Reform in Politics but not in Religious Liberty
Maluku, Eastern Indonesia: "Blasphemy" Triggers Pogrom
The OIC & the UN: recasting defamation of religions as incitement
The OIC and the UN: Islamophobia and "defamation of religion"
Vietnam: Govt Beligerance Escalates against Hanoi Catholics
Saudi Arabia: Shaken by Apostasy and Dissidence
Emerging glorious from the refiners fire

Somalia: A Fiery Furnace, Yet Christ is there                 

Iraq: Christians Flee Targeted Terror
Iran: Parliament passes Apostasy Death Bill
Philippines: Government to sign deal with MILF
Zimbabwe: we are being persecuted
Lebanon Falls
Malaysia: The Great Apostasy Debate stirs again
Burma (Myanmar): Pray for openness and liberty
Easter 2008
Malaysians to vote against creeping Islamisation
Chad: Islamist Jihad Coup Poses Major Threat
Iraq: Sudden Violence Shatters Calm
Papua (Indonesia): Genocide by Demographics
2007 :
China: Repression Escalates in lead-up to the Olympics - plus Turkey: Critical Update
Indonesia: Christians pressured from East to West
India: Desperately needing Divine Intervention
Iraq's Mandaeans
Bosnia: The Looming Storm
Turkey: Disinformation Endangers Christians
Maldives: Hope is Born
Lebanese Chrisians Face Perilous Times
Pray for Muslims on the Night of Power
Middle East: Praying for an Arab Awakening
India: Bangalore - The Barometer of India
The Islamisation of Malaysia
Iraq: Dire Need for Safe Haven from Genocide
UK: Sexual Orientation & Religious Liberty
Pakistan in Crisis: Situation Critical
Vietnam: Crackdown Creates Watershed

Religious Liberty Trends (2006/7):

Iran: Seduction & Persecution of the Church
2006 :
Pakistan: Musharrafs Manoeuvering
Southern Sudan: Serious Clash Threatens Peace
Nepal: Peace, Equality & Religious Liberty
Tajikistan: Religious Intolerance Needs to be Halted
Iran: Striving Towards and Apocalypse
Somalia: Desperate Plight of Christians
Afghanistan: The Return of the Religious Police
Iraqi's Mandaeans Face Genocide
Zimbabwe: Government Interference Escalates
China: Believers Vulnerable & Abused
Indonesia: Religious Liberty Crumbling
Nigeria: The Centre Fiddles While the North Burns
2004 / 5 :
Guinea: Future in the Balance
Watching Trends in Russia
France: Confronting Spiritual Powers
Reforming North Korea
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June 2009

Iran: How best to pray for Iran

In 1989 the father of the Iranian Revolution, Grand Ayatollah Khomeini,died without a successor. His rightful and designated successor, GrandAyatollah Hussain Ali Montazeri, had been sidelined in 1988 forprotesting corruption and human rights abuses. At that time Khameneiwas President, Mousavi was Prime Minister and Rafsanjani was Speaker ofthe Parliament.

They were secure because they had not protested the purges and massacres! Possibly because Rafsanjani thought Khamenei could be easily controlled, Rafsanjani convinced the Assembly of Experts to appoint Khamenei as Supreme Leader even though he was not qualified for the role. However, after Rafsanjani became president the two men started to clash. Rafsanjani's power base was the business class, so he supported business, the elite and economic growth. Khamenei's power base was 'the masses', so he supported the clerics,the poor and the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). Khameneiand the IRGC brought Ahmadinejad to power in 2005 specifically becausehe would serve their interests. With Ahmadinejad in power, the IRGC have been able to extend their control over much of the Iranian economy and pursue their own and Khamenei's regional ambitions.

So, at the heart of the present troubles is a power struggle between the Khamenei-IRGC-Ahmadinejad camp versus the Rafsanjani-Mousavi camp. Both camps are in the conservative block and all those involved are Islamists -- none of them are counter-revolutionaries. The Ahmadinejad camp is ideologically driven and committed to exporting Revolution, spending billions of petro-dollars through the IRGC on foreign adventures in Iraq, Gaza, Lebanon and beyond to establish regional hegemony. The Mousavi camp on the other hand, though equally Islamist, wants less belligerence and good international relations so it can focus on domestic issues and the economy. The largely young, urban intellectuals who have been protesting in the streets of Tehran are simply embarrassed by and frustrated with the present regime and are desperate for change. One analyst described Mousavi as merely a 'balloon' that had been 'inflated' by those determined to express their anger against Ahmadinejad a! nd Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei.

Independent a nalysts both inside and outside Iran believe that election fraud has taken place. However, this does not mean that Ahmadinejad would not have won the election anyway as he is enormously popular and is virtually worshipped by masses of rural poor who greatly appreciate his generous handouts. It is widely believed Khamenei and the IRGC wanted not only to guarantee Ahmadinejad's election but to provide him with a powerful mandate. The ruling regime had every intention of retaining power. As opposition started to mount even before the election, a senior official from the IRGC, Yadollah Javani, warned that the Revolutionary Guards would crush any attempt at a 'Velvet Revolution'.

Khamenei and Ahmadinejad control the guns and have the support of a clear majority of the 86-member Assembly of Experts (AoE). When Rafsanjani (who heads the AoE) recently approached the AoE -- possibly in an attempt to de-legitimise Khamenei -- his daughter and four other relatives were arres! ted. The Khamenei-Ahmadinejad-IRGC camp will retain power for the time being. Meanwhile, discontent, desperation and disillusionment are mounting.

PLEASE PRAY FOR IRAN THAT:

  • the hunger of Iranians for openness and answers will grow as many of them start to question what has gone wrong there and as they search for a better way; may many find answers in Jesus Christ. (Generally the protesters still hope for a pure Islamic State. They believe that Islam is the solution and that the present regime has merely diverged.)

  • God will wonderfully protect and preserve his besieged Church as persecution will doubtless escalate when the regime moves with rage and force to repress or even purge those who oppose it or are perceived to be a threat.

  • the Holy Spirit will breathe supernatural courage into the Iranian Church, so believers will witness with courage, conviction and authority; may every word of witness be blessed with every believer a prophetic vo! ice and a light shining in the darkness.

'For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.' (John 3:17 ESV)

NOTE: After the Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing on 4 June 1989, large numbers of Chinese elite (including Communist officials) rejected Communism and in a few short years the Chinese Church became truly representative of Chinese society. Christianity is now just as much a faith of the urban elite -- doctors, lawyers, artists, scholars and the like -- as it is a faith of the rural poor. Even amongst non- Christians, Communism is largely discredited and rejected and openness and liberty are sought.

Elizabeth Kendall

rl-research@crossnet.org.au 


Elizabeth Kendal is an international religious liberty analyst and advocate.

This prayer bulletin was initially written for the Australian Evangelical Alliance Religious Liberty Commission


http://www.ea.org.au/ReligiousLiberty/PrayerPostings.aspx.

June 2009 - Due to a World Evangelical Alliance operational change, Elizabeth concluded some 11 years' ministry with the WEA Religious Liberty Commission. However will carrying on her ministry as an international religious liberty analyst and advocate, , under the aegis of Australian EA RLC, and is continuing to write weekly Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletins (RLPBs), along with other RL ministries.

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