Skip to main content

Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi discharged from hospital and sent home, family say

Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi has been discharged from a cardiac care unit and sent home, weeks after being transferred from prison to hospital following a suspected heart attack, a foundation run by her family said on Monday. Mohammadi, 54, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2023 while in prison for her campaign to advance women's rights and abolish the death penalty in Iran. She was sentenced to a new prison term, the foundation said in February this year, in the build-up to the US and Israeli war against Iran. She suffered a suspected heart attack in late March and was transferred to a hospital a month later, first in the northwest city of Zanjan, then, after a temporary suspension of her sentence on heavy bail, to Tehran's Pars Hospital, the foundation has said. "Her recovery demands strict medical supervision outside prison walls. Returning her to detention is a death sentence," the foundation quoted Mohammadi's daughter, Kiana Rahmani,...

Trump-backed event features conservative Christians, criticised for blurring church-state lines

A Trump administration-backed celebration of US religious heritage on Sunday highlighted conservative Christian leaders' ties to the president as critics expressed that the gathering did not reflect the country's diverse faith landscape. Thousands of people attended the nine-hour programme, called "Rededicate 250: National Jubilee of Prayer, Praise & Thanksgiving," for a mixture of popular worship music and speakers from evangelical Christianity and conservative Catholic traditions. Sunday's events included video messages from members of the Trump administration, such as Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. All of them generally stuck to the prevailing theme of the day, touching on the Judeo-Christian roots of the country's founders and the themes they incorporated into some landmark documents such as the Declaration of Independence. The event mixed elements of a rally and a religious service, where chants of "U-S-A" broke out in the crowd at times, with contemporary Christian artists like Chris Tomlin leading the crowd in well-known worship songs. Read: Trump post depicting him as Jesus removed after backlash President Donald Trump did not record a new message for the occasion or attend in person, although organisers played a weeks-old video of him reciting 2 Chronicles 7:11-22, a recording that was originally released as part of the America Reads the Bible event. Rededicate 250 was organised by Freedom 250, a public-private partnership created by the White House to coordinate 250th anniversary celebrations alongside federal agencies. "We try to have something for everybody, that's really our mission," Freedom 250 CEO Keith Krach told Reuters. "I guess you can't please all the people all the time, but we're doing our absolute best job." Advocates of church-state separation said the event blurs government and religion. “This government-sponsored prayer fest is the epitome of exactly what our secular Constitution forbids our government from doing,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, in a statement. Read More: Trump's outburst on Pope sets off global storm Critics pointed to the absence of religious groups such as mainline Protestant churches, including Lutherans, Methodists and Episcopalians. Also not represented were the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Orthodox Christianity, Islam or Buddhism. More than a quarter of all US adults identify as religiously unaffiliated, according to figures from the Pew Research Centre. About 23% and 19% identify as evangelical Protestant and Catholic, respectively, and about 11% identify as mainline Protestant. But for Sunday's participants, the event marked a day to connect with others and their Christian faith. Michelle Fensky, in her 60s, said she bought her tickets to travel from her home in southern Oklahoma two days after Trump announced the event. "This is what I needed," she said. "It's been a hard few years for our country." 'Screenshot' of early America Faith leaders who spoke included Bishop Robert Barron, from the Catholic Diocese of Winona-Rochester; Jonathan Falwell, chancellor of Liberty University, a school established by Christian evangelicals; and Rabbi Meir Soloveichik, senior rabbi of Congregation Shearith Israel in New York City. Among the political speakers, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and Republican Senator Tim Scott appeared in person. No prominent Democrats joined. In a prayer, Johnson decried "sinister ideologies" that view US history "through the lens of our sins" rather than seeing God's blessings. "We remember that your mighty hand has been upon our nation since the very beginning," Johnson said. Also Read: US troops told Iran war is 'God's plan' to trigger Armageddon One of Sunday's speakers, National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference leader Samuel Rodriguez, said in an interview ahead of the event that the mostly Christian speaker list reflects what the American colonies looked like after the Great Awakening religious revival of the 18th century. "It’s pretty much a depiction, a screenshot of our foundation,” Rodriguez said. The event was one of 16 planned by the administration for the 250th anniversary of the United States, and the first in 2026. According to the event's website, it is meant to give "praise to God for 250 years of His Providence for the United States, in praying that God Bless and Protect America for the next 250 years, and in solemnly re-dedicating our country as One Nation under God."

from Latest World News, International News | Breaking World News https://ift.tt/eGigoJ3

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

At least 32 miners dead after bridge fails at cobalt site in southeast DR Congo

A bridge collapsed at a cobalt mine in southeast Democratic Republic of Congo killing at least 32 wildcat miners, a regional government official said Sunday. The bridge came down Saturday onto a flooded zone at the mine in Lualaba province, Roy Kaumba Mayonde, the provincial interior minister, told reporters. He said 32 bodies had been recovered and more were being searched for. The DRC produces more than 70 percent of the world supply of cobalt, which is essential for batteries used in electric cars, many laptop computers and mobile phones. More than 200,000 people are estimated to be working in giant illegal cobalt mines in the giant central African country. Local authorities said the bridge collapsed at the Kalando mine, about 42 kilometres (26 miles) southeast of the Lualaba provincial capital, Kolwezi. "Despite a formal ban on access to the site because of the heavy rain and the risk of a landslide, wildcat miners forced their way into the quarry," said Mayonde. He said ...

Indian devotees splurge on jets, gold idols as Hindu temple opens

The private jet parking lots at airports near the Indian city of Ayodhya are full and the shops have run out of gold-plated idols, as wealthy devotees prepare for the invite-only opening ceremony of one of Hinduism's holiest temples. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani are among the 8,000 or so attendees at Monday's inauguration event for the Ram Temple, which devotees believe is built on the birthplace of Lord Ram, a sacred Hindu deity. The construction of the temple, which began after the Supreme Court awarded the site to Hindus in 2019 more than two decades after a Hindu mob razed a mosque there, triggering deadly riots, fulfils a key campaign promise of Modi and his Hindu nationalist party. Read BJP-promised temple transforms Ayodhya: Muslims, locals feel neglected The opening ceremony, organised by the trust that built the temple, comes months before a national election which the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is widely expected to w...

Indian opposition supporters detained ahead of protest at Modi's home

Police in the Indian capital detained dozens of opposition supporters on Tuesday as they attempted to march to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's residence to protest against last week's arrest of Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal. Kejriwal, a key opposition leader whose Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has governed the national capital territory for a decade, was arrested by the financial crime-fighting agency on corruption charges relating to the city's liquor policy, weeks before India begins voting in general elections on April 19. He was remanded to the custody of the Enforcement Directorate until March 28, with the lawyer for the agency arguing he was the "kingpin" in the case and needed to be interrogated. Kejriwal's party, all of whose main leaders are now imprisoned in connection with the case, says he has been "falsely arrested" in a "fabricated case". The federal government and Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) deny political interfere...