Taliban Gunmen Kill Aid Worker For Spreading Christianity

AMIR SHAH | 10/20/08 03:05 PM | AP

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This is an undated handout image released Monday Oct. 20, 2008 by the charity SERVE Afghanistan, of aid worker Gayle Williams. Taliban gunmen killed Christian aid worker Gayle Williams in Kabul as she was walking to work on Monday, and the militant group said it targeted the woman because she was spreading her religion. The dual South African-British national, who worked with handicapped Afghans, was shot to death by gunmen who drove by on a motorbike in western Kabul, said Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary. The Taliban claimed responsibility. (AP Photo/Serve Afghanistan, Ho)

KABUL, Afghanistan — Taliban assailants on a motorbike gunned down a Christian aid worker in Kabul on Monday and the militants said she was killed for spreading her religion _ a rare targeted killing of a Westerner in the nation's capital.

Gayle Williams, a 34-year-old dual British-South African national who helped handicapped Afghans, was shot to death as she was walking to work about 8 a.m., said Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary.

A spokesman for the militants said the Taliban ordered her killed because she was accused of proselytizing.

"This woman came to Afghanistan to teach Christianity to the people of Afghanistan," Zabiullah Mujahid told The Associated Press. "Our (leaders) issued a decree to kill this woman."

Britain's secretary of state for international development called the killing a "callous and cowardly act" and said Williams was in Afghanistan to help ease poverty.

"To present her killing as a religious act is as despicable as it is absurd _ it was cold blooded murder," Douglas Alexander said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for the aid group, SERVE _ Serving Emergency Relief and Vocational Enterprises _ said it is a Christian organization but denied it was involved in proselytizing.

"It's not the case that they preach, not at all," said the spokeswoman, Rina van der Ende. "They are here to do NGO (aid) work."

Afghanistan is a conservative Islamic nation. Proselytizing is prohibited by law, and other Christian missionaries or charities have faced severe hostility. Last year, 23 South Korean aid workers from a church group were taken hostage in southern Afghanistan. Two were killed and the rest were eventually released.

According to its Web site, SERVE is a Christian charity registered in Britain and has been working with Afghan refugees since 1980 in Pakistan.

"SERVE Afghanistan's purpose is to express God's love and bring hope by serving the people of Afghanistan, especially the needy, as we seek to address personal, social and environmental needs," the site says.

A member of Afghanistan's highest religious council said Monday that rumors have spread over the last two years that Westerners have been preaching Christianity to Afghans.

"We have heard rumors that houses have been rented to preach Christianity in Kabul and some provinces, but we have no evidence that this is taking place," said council member Jebra Ali. The council previously has made a formal complaint to President Hamid Karzai that Westerners are trying to spread Christianity in Afghanistan.

Monday's attack adds to a growing sense of insecurity in Kabul. The city is now blanketed with police checkpoints, and embassies, military bases and the U.N. are erecting cement barriers to guard against suicide bombings.

Kidnappings targeting wealthy Afghans have long been a problem in Kabul, but attacks against Westerners have grown recently. In mid-August, Taliban militants killed three women working for the U.S. aid group International Rescue Committee while they were driving in Logar, a province south of Kabul.

Elsewhere in Afghanistan, a suicide bomber killed two German soldiers and five children in Kunduz province to the north, said Mohammad Omar, the provincial governor. NATO confirmed some of its soldiers were killed or wounded in the attack.

Omar said the soldiers were patrolling on foot when the bomber riding a bicycle hit them. Northern Afghanistan has been spared much of the violence afflicting Afghanistan's eastern and southern provinces.

West of Kabul, meanwhile, assault helicopters dropped NATO troops into Jalrez district in Wardak province on Thursday, sparking a two-day battle involving airstrikes, the military alliance said in a statement Monday.

More than 20 militants were killed, NATO said.

Wardak province, just 40 miles west of Kabul, has become an insurgent stronghold. Militants have expanded their traditional bases in the country's south and east _ along the border with Pakistan _ and have gained territory in the provinces surrounding Kabul, a worrying development for Afghan and NATO troops.

Those advances are part of the reason that top U.S. military officials have warned the international mission to defeat the Taliban is in peril, and why NATO generals have called for a sharp increase in the number of troops.

Some 65,000 international troops now operate in Afghanistan, including about 32,000 Americans.

Speaking in London on Monday, Gen. John Craddock, the head of U.S. European Command and NATO's supreme allied commander for Europe, called into question the political will among alliance members for the mission in Afghanistan.

Commanders have called for more NATO troops to be deployed in the violent south, but some NATO members have refused to move their troops from more peaceful parts of the country and have imposed restrictions on the duties their forces can carry out.

"It is this wavering political will that impedes operational progress and brings into question the relevance of the alliance here in the 21st century," Craddock told the Royal United Services Institute, a military think tank.

___

Associated Press reporter Noor Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

SERVE Afghanistan, http://www.serveafghanistan.org

KABUL, Afghanistan — Taliban assailants on a motorbike gunned down a Christian aid worker in Kabul on Monday and the militants said she was killed for spreading her religion _ a rare targeted ki...
KABUL, Afghanistan — Taliban assailants on a motorbike gunned down a Christian aid worker in Kabul on Monday and the militants said she was killed for spreading her religion _ a rare targeted ki...
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11:44 PM on 10/21/2008
Superstition/religion has NO PLACE in the AGE OF REASON.
02:25 AM on 10/22/2008
Does superstition/religion have any place in the Age of Reason?

Just wondering.
03:35 AM on 10/22/2008
Funny you should ask. . .
03:03 AM on 10/22/2008
I don't remember Zen masters offing anyone. Do you?
I do remember something about mustard gas, Hisroshima , global warming, Chernobyl,.. clearly the products of Age of Reason. Advice: think about possibilities and stop the cartoonish incoherency.
03:21 AM on 10/22/2008
The incredible power of the weapons science has provided are EXACTLY why we cannot afford to live our lives with fairy tales as our guides.

WTF do YOU know about zen, haoli?
Gasparilla
buy your local newspaper
07:30 PM on 10/21/2008
I have no use for religion myself, although I have members of my family who are the live and let live type of Christians. A lot of the people posting here are of the "she brought it on herself" argument. But if Muslims are free to practice their religion and advocate in the West, then how do they deny others the same in their country, under pain of death? And not just in their own countries, but others. The Dutch filmaker, Theo Van Gogh, was murdered on the streets of Amsterdam for making a film about the repression of women in the Muslim religious community. The woman who the film was about is now in this country because of all the threats against her. I am happy to condemn religious extremism in this country and elsewhere. Unlike some others, I will point it out among too many of the Muslim community.
11:40 PM on 10/21/2008
Religion = Bigotry
07:00 PM on 10/23/2008
One lines=limited understanding
05:50 PM on 10/21/2008
You know, the blog post describes the work this woman was doing before she was murdered--that of helping the handicapped.

Few comments here even mention that. Apparently, it's more important to the Anti-God Squad that she may have mentioned "Gawd" during the act of helping disabled Afghans.

And the same folks loudly and indignantly proclaim their morality. I wonder what that concept means to them.
11:41 PM on 10/21/2008
Ethics and respect for other humans are antithetical to religion.
01:21 AM on 10/22/2008
Hm. Instead of expressing compassion for someone senselessly and brutally murdered in the act of helping the disabled, many of the posters here have chosen instead to trash her religious beliefs. This demonstrates a profound lack of respect for other humans.

So the guilty parties, including yourself, must be religious. Cool. Thanks for clearing that up.

What faith do you belong to, Nik?
12:04 PM on 10/21/2008
HumeSkeptic M.O.
When Any religion but Is-m is blamed---proclaim moral indignation.
When M-ims are blamed, declare it a false flag operation. Blame it on MSM.
Whenthe facts are incontrovertible-- deflect the blame and redirect the thread.
Disease: A clear case of romanticizing the noble M-im freedom fighters', fight against Western liberalism on the streets, train stations and buses of Kabul, London, Madrid, Beslan, Bali, Paris and Philippines.
Syndrome: The boy who cried Boooosh.
11:42 PM on 10/21/2008
All religions are nothing but excuses to oppress others for personal gain.
01:43 AM on 10/22/2008
Zen Buddhism.... Dalai Lama....
11:27 AM on 10/21/2008
Humes, as usual your rhetoric always teeters between incoherent and just plain immoral.
Pay attention now.

1.Proselytizing is NOT wrong, k i l l i ng women is wrong. Think about it.
2,. Your astonishing statement " No one is condoning k il ling... but she should've known better" clearly condones it!
This is a precise equivalent of: " next time to avoid r a= p e, she shouldn't walk down this dark alley."
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HeevenSteven
20 Minutes into the future.
04:13 PM on 10/21/2008
I think Dick Cheney's rationalization of the deaths of 4000 of our troops went something like "They volunteered".

Proselytizing in a place where it is considered deeply offensive and routinely punished by death is in a sense volunteering for whatever comes your way. I'll put as much blame on the dopes who sent her there bringing that country exactly what they don't need right now, more religious tension. They have enough culture shock to deal with.

".....If only we could fully understand that the evils with which we contend are frequently the fruit of illusions very much like our own........" -- Reinhold Niebuhr
03:21 AM on 10/22/2008
So by your genius logic Heeven, Mother T eresa should've gotten the same treatment from Hindu nationalists. What logic, what wit....
04:38 PM on 10/21/2008
They can't hear you. They lack the essential feature: humanity.
11:06 AM on 10/21/2008
Coexist, I am a strong believer of that.
10:35 AM on 10/21/2008
There well maybe a flaw in this idea, but it seems to me, it might be more prudent for Christian based charity groups to transfer their funds earmarked for Afghanistan to the Red Crescent.
11:50 AM on 10/21/2008
This may be actually a good idea. The problem is on the ground, funds get quickly embezzled without direct control due to corruption and inefficiencies.
01:42 AM on 10/23/2008
All religions are corrupt. Raycist.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mabo
Conservative...dialogue welcome!
09:57 AM on 10/21/2008
Once again, "tolerance" is demanded by the left for EVERYTHING...except for those that hold to religion. Then it is gloves off and good riddance! How "tolerant" of you all.
10:03 AM on 10/21/2008
The politically correct position of tolerance is not one to which I would subscribe. Nor would you or any other well-reasoned human being. Shall we tolerate world views that require human sacrifice upon the altar of some deity? I think not. Tolerance has its place but it also MUST have its limits.

"It is wrong always, everywhere, and for anyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence." - William Clifford

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Kingdon_Clifford
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brooklyncitizen
Quaerite primum regnum dei
11:21 AM on 10/21/2008
Explain that to Einstein....he was a believer...

The point is that neither the religious nor your camp of non-believers have all the answers...hence tolerance is the middle way.

By tolerance I don't mean a merging of church and state as we have seen these last 8 years in america...that is unacceptable. But equally unacceptable is this vehement attack and vitriol because against a woman actively giving and helping the disabled in Afghanistan....we will never truly know her intimate reasons for choosing to be there but it couldn't have been an easy or pleasurable life.
05:01 PM on 10/21/2008
I love the disconnect in your post. First, you portray religion as horribly evil and assert that it's out of the question to tolerate such evil--only serving to show the effectiveness of condemning something in absolute terms, of playing the bad guy/good guy game, white hats and all. (Paging Gary Cooper and John Wayne.) Never mind that reducing real life to a B-Western amounts to a fallacy. Never mind that self-described rational thinkers put their rationality in doubt every time they peak the hyperbole meter.

Then you provide a quote that's a complete non sequitur--it addresses the folly of believing something without proof, but has nothing to do with the horrible evils of religion.

Are we supposed to conflate the two things (human sacrifice, believing without proof), or what? Believers also sing hymns and put money in their church's collection plates. Two activities that, while they seem harmless on their surface, simply contribute to the sacrificing of human life at the altar of some deity. Got it.
10:32 AM on 10/21/2008
There's a difference between attack people with religion, and criticizing religious belief/organized institutions.

You've put religion on such a high pedestal, that when someone does criticize it or say "this can't be true," etc... you get all offended and such.

Do you get this offended when people criticize your choice in political leaders? Sports teams? Musicians? Then why religion?
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brooklyncitizen
Quaerite primum regnum dei
11:16 AM on 10/21/2008
THere is a particular vehemence when the left attacks the religious.....you surely must see that. Though I am sure people feel strongly about their sports teams any discussion around that is competitive and social and brings people together...no one disowns their family or friends etc because of sports differences.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Americatortures
09:54 AM on 10/21/2008
Spreading Christianity to people who revile Christians is really dumb!!! Especially in THEIR country---DUMBER!!! Another death caused by religion!!
02:03 AM on 10/23/2008
Spreading Isalm in a christian country? Really Dumb.... right, Americatort?
Let's get 'em pesky Islam spreaders in U.S. and the West.... AmericaTort poster and people like him condone offing of people on grounds of religious intolerance. Hey, boys will be boys, right, genius?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Americatortures
09:52 AM on 10/21/2008
Helping these people in ANY way is foolish! Just send in the proper military to rid the area of Bin Laden and the people who murdered 3,000 Americans, burn the poppy crop---and scram!!!
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newworldman777
What would our future 7th generation think of us?
10:19 AM on 10/21/2008
Typical Republican mindest. Let's see...to rid the area of Bin Laden, our troops will probably have to cross the border into Pakistan. Our troops will undoubtedly have to resort to "extreme measures" -- torture tactics approved by our Republican White House -- to force the locals to divulge info regarding Bin Laden's whereabouts. Undoubtedly, many local civilians will die in the resulting conflict. The coup de grace will be our burning their poppy crops -- quite a task, considering the tens of thousands of acres involved. We will have thus killed countless innocent Afghan and Pakistan civilians and destroyed the means of survival for thousands more (without having helped to provide them with an alternative). I can only wonder how many more America-hating "terrorists" we will create during that aggressive and violent fiasco.

Republicans, try doing something that is obviously difficult for you to do: Think! Think about the consequences of your actions. All actions have consequences. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. What goes around, comes around.
09:26 AM on 10/21/2008
Chalk up yet another public relations triumph for the "Religion of Peace."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wak84
09:09 AM on 10/21/2008
As I read these posts I see a lot of support for banning religion. To ban religion is like trying to ban humans from trying to find meaning in life...that's all relgions are anyway, human beings searching for meaning on this rock we call home. We've evolved to the point that survival no longer takes all our effort, although with the current economic crisis, that could change. And yes, I do realize that, for too many in the world, survival does consume their every thought. Still, as humans we search for meaning. Hopefully, religions, too, will evolve with our increasing knowledge of existence. But change does not come easily to those that hold religious power over others.

I, myself, no longer believe in organized religion. And this great revelation comes after four years of graduate work in Catholic theology! The leaders of every religion end up making God too small and eventually cause divisiveness among people. We try to define the undefinable, instead of just being. Too many religions are so focused on a promised "afterlife" that they ignore reality. My personal search for meaning has integrated science and religion and led me to understand the interconnectedness of everything that is. Everything that is or was, existed atomically, at the big bang. It just evolved and changed, and continues to do so. We're just a part of it. Carl Sagan was correct, we are made of "starstuff."
08:52 AM on 10/21/2008
Gayle Williams, well done thou good and faithful servant. Go with God now.
11:08 AM on 10/21/2008
I agree. I join you in thanking God and Gayle's family for her service in His name. I'm sure her contribution in Afghanistan will live on in the people she touched.
08:48 AM on 10/21/2008
No one deserves the death penalty--especially without a proper trial--for peaceful proselytizing. You may not like peaceful proselytizing. Most people don't like to be proselytized. However, this woman did not deserve to be gunned down for it. She was not hurting any body. The facts of this article are that at the very least she was helping the disabled. Would you say that if a Jehovah's Witness was taken out while knocking on doors that they were asking for it? No. You may not like what they do, but you know that people should not be murdered no matter what their religious persuasion/activities are.

This is not to say that organized religion and religious people haven't caused suffering. But was this particular woman responsible for, say, the actual Crusades in the 12th century? No. Did this particular woman drown other women on charges of witchcraft? No.

It doesn't matter if she was "asking for it" by being in that country in the first place as a Christian. She should not have been killed. That is immoral and unjust. The people who killed her need to stop doing that. The people who killed her are guilty of religious violence and rob their own people of freedom of religion. They are not the heroes.
08:44 AM on 10/21/2008
There is a great difference between "religion" and "organized religion". Personal beliefs which are private have a place in all communities. Organized religion is the corporate religion which seeks dominance and is critical of other organized beliefs. This causes wars and always has. Organized religion teaches children beliefs before the age of reason and that is wrong. That's why private beliefs should be a right and organized religion should be banned. This is the basis of the current conflict between China and the Catholic church.