Saturday, March 17, 2018

March 17, 2000: Cult Mass Murder, 778 Dead



778 members of the "Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God" in Uganda had died on March 17, 2000 in Uganda as a result of a mass murder.

March 17, 2000, was the new end of the world, a doomsday they said would come "with ceremony, and finality". The Movement held a huge party, where they roasted three bulls and drank 70 crates of soft drinks. Minutes after the members arrived at the party, nearby villagers heard an explosion, and the building was gutted in an intense fire that killed all 530 in attendance, including dozens of children. The windows and doors of the building had been boarded up to prevent people from leaving. The fire alerted the Ugandan authorities as to what had been occurring in the Movement.

Several days before Movement leader Dominic Kataribabo was seen buying 50 liters of sulfuric acid, which may have started the fire.

Another party was planned for the eighteenth, which officials believe sect leaders had announced in order to mislead authorities as to their plans. The five principal cult leaders were assumed to have died in the fire.

Four days after the church fire, police investigated Movement properties and discovered hundreds of bodies at sites across southern Uganda. Six bodies were discovered sealed in the latrine of the Kanungu compound, as well as 153 bodies at a compound in Buhunage, 155 bodies at Dominic Kataribabo's estate at Rugazi, where they had been poisoned and stabbed, and another 81 bodies lay at leader Joseph Nymurinda's farm. Police stated that they had been murdered about three weeks before the church inferno.

Other than the individuals who died in the fire, medical examiners determined that the majority of dead sect members had been poisoned. After searching all sites, the police concluded that the final death toll had settled at 778.

After interviews and an investigation were conducted, the police ruled out a cult suicide, and instead consider it to be a mass murder conducted by Movement leadership. They believe that the failure of the doomsday prophecy led to a revolt in the ranks of the sect, and the leaders set a new date with a plan to eliminate their followers.

Wikipedia

Poland Bows to Church, Introduces Sunday Trade Ban



Poland, one of the most religious nations in Europe, has introduced a Sunday trade ban. 

The ban will be implemented gradually.

In 2018, stores will be open only 2 Sundays per month: the first one and the last one.
In 2019, they'll be awailable only 1 Sunday per month: the last one.
Starting from 2020, there will be only 5 Sundays per year open for trade: 2 before Christmas, 1 before Easter, and the last Sundays of January, April, June and August.

The ban has started in March 2018 and affects most of the stores, exept bakeries, ice cream locations, gas station stores and small mom-and-pop shops where owners stand at the counter themselves.


Via Business Insider, Bankier.pl

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

At least 22 Buffalo priests publicly linked to sex allegations

At least 22 priests who worked in the Buffalo area have been publicly accused in recent decades, according to Buffalo News.

Some were arrested. Some were named in lawsuits. Some were accused of wrongdoing outside of Western New York.

They represent a fraction of the priests who have been the targets of complaints privately filed with the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo.




1. John R. Aurelio – Aurelio admitted to Niagara County law enforcement in 1993 that he and Rev. Bernard M. Mach sodomized young boys in a house the priests shared in East Aurora. The abuse happened 15 to 20 years prior, Aurelio told authorities. As of 2002, Aurelio was no longer functioning as a priest and lived out of state.

2. Benedict P. Barszcz – A former assistant pastor of St. Peter's in Lewiston, he was charged in July 1999 with exposing himself to two teenage girls in Buffalo. Subsequently, he was no longer allowed to publicly celebrate Mass or the sacraments, the diocese said.

3. David Bialkowski – A former altar server accused Bialkowski of inappropriate touching in 2011. Two more accusers came forward shortly after the initial accusations were made and Bialkowski was put on administrative leave from St. John Gualbert in Cheektowaga and ordered not to perform any priestly duties.

4. Robert Biesinger – Biesinger was accused in a 1995 lawsuit of sexually assaulting a 15-year-old girl in August 1974 during a drill-team competition in Chicago, as well as at locations in the Buffalo area. Biesinger resigned as pastor of a Cheektowaga parish in 1994 and retired before the diocese settled the lawsuit in 1996.

5. Secondo Casarotto - The diocese in 2012 reached a financial settlement with a 37-year-old woman who accused Casarotto of groping her inside the rectory of St. Anthony Church in Buffalo in 2009. No charges were filed against Casarotto but he was removed as a priest.

6. Charles Cassetta – Cassetta was accused in a lawsuit filed around 2003 of sexually assaulting a 17-year-old girl in 1971 and 1972 in Palm Beach County, Fla. Cassetta, who left the priesthood in 1975, worked in Buffalo before Florida.

7. James H. Cotter – The Buffalo diocese was accused in a 2007 lawsuit of transferring Cotter to San Diego, where he was accused of molesting a 7-year-old boy in the late 1980s. The diocese did not contributed to a settlement paid by the San Diego Diocese to 144 people who accused clergy of abuse.

8. Joseph Friel – Friel was named in a July 1994 lawsuit by a Town of Boston man who said he was molested by the priest in the late 1960s. Friel died in 1995.

9. Linus Hennessy, a Franciscan friar who had taught at Bishop Timon High School, was accused in 2015 by Buffalo resident Tino Flores of sexually abusing Flores for five years in the 1970s, beginning when Flores was 10 years old. Bishop Richard J. Malone said at the time that the complaint was referred to the Order of Friars Minor, to which Hennessy belonged. Flores provided to The News a 2013 letter from Brother Edward Coughlin of the Holy Name Province of the Order of Friars Minor to Dr. Philip Scozzaro, Flores' physician, stating that Coughlin did not know if Flores was abused "or the extent of any abuse on the part of Fr. Hennessy." The letter referenced the possibility of a $50,000 financial settlement. Hennessy died in 1983.

10. Stanley Idziak was accused in 1988 by two brothers, Rick and Bill Larango, of sexually abusing them while serving as a priest at their parish, Our Lady of Czestochowa Church in North Tonawanda, in the 1970s. After the Larango family moved to Atlanta, Ga., Idziak arranged to be transferred to their new parish and continued to abuse the younger Larango brother, according to their mother. Janet Larango confronted Idziak in 1988 after the priest was accused of molesting two other children near Atlanta. The Atlanta Archdiocese paid $570,000 to settle a 1991 lawsuit over sexual abuse brought against it by that Georgia family. The Larangos never sued, but the Archdiocese paid for counseling services for their sons, Janet Larango said. Idziak died in 2017.  The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo declined to say if it has received any complaints against Idziak.

11. Fred D. Ingalls – Ingalls pleaded guilty to child pornography charges in June 2004. He was an administrator at St. Joseph in Varysburg and St. Cecilia in Sheldon at the time of his arrest. He was sentenced to three years and one month in federal prison.

12. Gerald Jasinski, who was a priest at St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Lancaster, was arrested June 7, 1986, on felony charges of first-degree sodomy and first-degree sexual abuse and a charge of unlawfully dealing with a child by the Wyoming County Sheriff's Office.  Jasinski was accused of having sexual contact with two boys, aged 15 and 18, at a cabin in the town of Sheldon. The outcome of the case could not be determined. The file at the Wyoming County Clerk's Office has been sealed, a clerk there said.

13. Timothy Kelley – Kelley was accused in a 2003 lawsuit in Florida of abusing a former altar boy who was a student at a Dunkirk school. The alleged abuse happened in 1983.

14. Bernard M. Mach – A civil lawsuit filed Dec. 9, 1993, accused Mach of sexually abusing a 12-year-old boy in the rectory of St. Mary's Church in Lockport two years prior. The matter was brought before a grand jury. It did not indict Mach. The diocese later settled a $2 million lawsuit. The Rev. John R. Aurelio told police he and Mach sodomized young boys in an East Aurora house in the 1970s. As of 2002, Mach was no longer functioning as a priest and lived out of state.

15. Loville N. Martlock – Martlock was placed on "medical leave" in April 1994 after being accused of abusing a boy between 1974 and 1978. He was no longer functioning as a priest, the diocese said in 2002. He died in 2014 at age 77.

16. Norbert F. Orsolits – On the same day this week when a South Buffalo man publicly accused him of sexually abusing him more than 35 years ago, Orsolits admitted to The Buffalo News he had sexual contact with "probably dozens" of teenage boys. He remains a priest, but after 2003 was no longer allowed to say Mass or perform other priestly duties.

17. Robert J. Smith – Smith, who was expelled from a Buffalo-area seminary in 1959, was sued separately in 1993 and 1994 by two former altar boys over alleged sexual abuse in Santa Fe.

18. James A. Spielman – A settlement was revealed in 2002 about a sexual assault complaint against Spielman filed in 1993. The alleged abuse happened in the 1970s. The diocese settled the complaint in 1994. Spielman resigned from the priesthood and moved out of state.

19. Bernard Splawski – Splawski was accused in 1986 of fondling an 18-year-old male student at Bishop Timon High School. He resigned in February 2003 as pastor of a New Jersey parish due to renewed complaints from the former student's family.

20. Charles M. Werth – Werth was charged in 1994 and 2004 after incidents in Ellicott Creek Park. In the earlier case, he was charged with sexual abuse and pleaded guilty to exposure, a violation. In the latter incident, the then-retired priest was charged with public lewdness and afterwards removed from active ministry. The diocese said neither allegation involved young people. He died in December at age 89.

21. William F. White – White was placed on leave in February 1993 after he was accused of sexual abuse. He was no longer functioning as a priest and had moved out of state, the diocese said in 2002.

22. Robert Wood – Wood was removed as pastor of St. Joseph in Varysburg in 2003 after being accused of sexually abusing a minor. At the time, he said it involved an alleged incident that happened 16 years prior.

Buffalo News




Tuesday, March 13, 2018

India: One "Witch" Gang-Raped, Another Killed





Indian media report two witch-hunting cases that occured in the country last week in the eastern state of Jharkhand.


March 7

Villagers  allegedly gang-raped an old widow, after branding her as a "witch".

A group of villagers barged into her house and dragged her to the “kangaroo court” held on the outskirt of the house, according to a complaint registered with the police by the victim.

At the court, the widow was branded as a "witch" and blamed for all kinds of health-related problems plaguing the village.

Subsequently, she was taken to the nearby jungle where she was gang-raped by some villagers, according to the complainant.


March 9
An 80-year-old Dalit woman of Chainpur, Palamau, was axed to death on Friday allegedly by a villager who called her a "witch".


Gulf News, The Telegraph India


Monday, March 12, 2018

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