Video shows Kidnapped Priest in Yemen Appealing for Help
Islamist terrorists killed 16 at nursing home
By Michael Ireland, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
ADEN, YEMEN (ANS, December 31, 2016) - A
Catholic priest kidnapped in Yemen almost 10 months ago appealed for
help in a video released this week by a terrorist group, according to
Morning Star News (www.morningstarnews.org).
The
Rev. Tom Uzhunnalil was kidnapped on March 4, 2016, in Aden, Yemen when
a group of militants, thought to belong to an offshoot of the Islamic
State (IS) movement, killed 16 people in an attack on the Aden Care
Home, a nursing home facility.
Morning
Star News says that, in his statement on the video, which was released
on Christmas Day, Uzhunnalil said he was kidnapped, “Because I was
working for the Christian religion and the church.”
Morning
Star News reports that Uzhunnalil, a native of India, then went on to
say he felt abandoned by his religious leaders and claimed that if he
were a priest of European descent, his captivity would have been taken
more seriously.
“Nothing
has been done by Pope Francis or the Bishop of Abu Dhabi to get me
released, in spite of contact being made by my captors,” he said. “Dear
Pope Francis, dear Holy Father, as a father please take care of my
life.”
In
the video, Uzhunnalil implored Christians in his native India to put
pressure on authorities by using their “might to help me to safe my life
… Please take care of my life.”
Morning
Star News reports that before he was kidnapped, Uzhunnalil was
clean-shaven. In the video he had a full beard and appeared weak and
out-of-breath. Speaking hesitantly, he said his health was deteriorating
and that he was “very sad and depressed.”
Bishop
Paul Hinder, the apostolic vicar of southern Arabia, told Morning Star
News that Uzhunnalil appeared to be under duress when the video was
made.
“Listening to the video, I got the impression that it has been produced under extreme pressure on Father Tom,” Hinder said.
Morning Star News said Hinder declined to comment further, citing ongoing efforts to secure Uzhunnalil’s release.
“It
is part of the nature of such dramatic events that the steps undertaken
cannot be revealed until their goal has been reached,” he said.
In
a press statement on Tuesday (Dec. 27), vicariate officials said the
church had made “countless appeals from the highest levels to secure his
release.”
“Pope
Francis made a heartfelt appeal to the kidnappers to release Father Tom
on Sunday the 10th of April 2016, ‘In the hope given us by the Risen
Christ, I renew my appeal for the liberation of all persons seized in
areas of armed conflict: in particular, I desire to remember the
Salesian priest, Tom Uzhunnalil, kidnapped at Aden in Yemen this past
March fourth,’” the statement read.
The
statement also mentioned the midnight Christmas Mass at the Cathedral
Parish of St. Joseph’s in Abu Dhabi, where the bishop and tens of
thousands gathered and prayed in silence for Uzhunnalil’s safety.
In
background on the kidnapping, Morning Star News said that on March 4 at
approximately 8:30 a.m., a group of militant Islamic extremists entered
the nursing home in Aden and killed 16 people.
The
Catholic news site Crux reported that the single survivor of the
attack, a nun known as Sister Sally, said the gunmen first killed a
guard and a driver at the home and then moved on to the four nuns. The
militants then “tied them up, shot them in the head and smashed their
heads” as others in the home screamed for the militants to show the nuns
mercy, according to Crux.
The
slain nuns were identified as Sister Anselm from India, Sister Judith
from Kenya and Sisters Marguerite and Reginette from Rwanda.
The surviving sister escaped the attackers by hiding behind a door in a walk-in refrigerator.
Morning
Star News reported that during the attack, Uzhunnalil rushed to the
chapel tabernacle in an attempt to consume all the sanctified hosts used
in Communion, apparently to keep them from being desecrated, before he
was abducted. The militants then set about destroying all the Christian
symbols and liturgical articles in the tabernacle. The entire attack and
kidnapping lasted 90 minutes, according to the surviving nun.
Since
the kidnapping, essentially no information about the safety or
whereabouts of Uzhunnalil has been available. Weeks after the
kidnapping, Archbishop of Vienna, Christoph Cardinal Schonborn, claimed
publically that Uzhunnalil had been crucified on Good Friday.
Photographs, allegedly of Uzhunnalil’s corpse, were circulated as
evidence of his death, but research by Morning Star News showed the
photos were actually from the funeral of another priest in the region
who had just died.
Morning
Star News explained that according to indigenous missions support group
Christian Aid Mission, 0.2 percent of Yemen’s 27.4 million people are
Christians. Yemen consistently places high in studies ranking countries
for their mistreatment of Christians. Plagued by low-intensity conflicts
for years, the country plunged into a full-scale civil war in March
2015 along Shia and Sunni lines. Several terrorist groups, including IS
and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, have taken advantage of the power
vacuum that exists in the country and have set up bases of operation.
Photo
captions: 1) Rev. Tom Uzhunnalil was kidnapped on March 4 in Aden,
Yemen after a group of militants killed 16 people at the Aden Care Home,
a nursing home facility. 2) Old Town Aden, Yemen. (Wikipedia, Jialiang
Gao). 3) Michael Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ANS since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Please consider
helping Michael cover his expenses in bringing news of the Persecuted
Church, by logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael.
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