Marie Komar (15 July 005)
"Child sacrifices in London"


From: The Berean Call
Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2005 10:27 AM
To: updates@lists.thebereancall.org
Subject: TBC Today : "No Doubt We're In The Last Days" News
 

Child sacrifices in London [Excerpts]from UK paper

Boys from Africa are being murdered as human sacrifices in London churches.

They are brought into the capital to be offered up in rituals by
fundamentalist Christian sects, according to a shocking report by Scotland
Yard.

Followers believe that powerful spells require the deaths of "unblemished"
male children.

Police believe such boys are trafficked from cities such as Kinshasa where
they can be bought for as little as £10.

The 10-month study was commissioned after the death of Victoria Climbi, who
was starved and beaten to death after they said she was possessed by the
devil.

There are believed to be 300 such churches in the UK, mostly in London.

The report was put together by an expert social worker and lawyer for the
Met after talking to hundreds of people in African communities in a series
of workshops. It uncovered allegations of witchcraft spells, child
trafficking and HIV-positive people who believe that by having sex with a
child they will be "cleansed".

An extract reads: "People who are desperate will seek out experts to cast
spells for them.

"Members of the workshop stated that for a spell to be powerful it required
a sacrifice involving a male child unblemished by circumcision. They allege
that boy children are being trafficked into the UK for this purpose."

It adds: "A number of pastors maintain that God speaks through them and lets
them know when someone is possessed.

"It is therefore their duty to deliver the child or adult from the evil
spirit."

Last month Scotland Yard revealed it had traced just two out of 300 black
boys aged four to seven reported missing from London schools in a
three-month period.

The true figure for missing boys and girls is feared to be several thousand
a year (Edwards, Evening Standard, This is London, June 16, 2005).

[TBC: While the reporter may identify these people as "fundamentalist
Christians," it is clear that their beliefs are unbilblical and driven by
ancient animist beliefs which have far more in common with new age
philosophies.]