V
Victoria33
Guest
I’m reading this story. Charities may have limits as to what they can do, say if they are suppose to be there to feed the poor as their established cause. You would think it is a good cause to pay a ransom to free hostages, probably Catholic or Christian. So, I can see, how this “challenges” what would be morally correct to do.
To me, it seems an easy answer, yes, you pay ransom to free the captive but apparently, the catch here that they may be prosecuting the charity on is that then, if you pay a ransom, you are financing terrorism. I can see how one could establish a “racket” to do this. This probably did not cross the charity’s mind. Of course, in my mind, they freed people, all or most Christian I would think, I’m glad they did it. I believe I remember this particular situation. I’ve followed the situation over there rather closely, it never dawned on me that “paying ransoms” = “financing terrorism”.
Story:
http://aina.org/news/20190714143045.htm
To me, it seems an easy answer, yes, you pay ransom to free the captive but apparently, the catch here that they may be prosecuting the charity on is that then, if you pay a ransom, you are financing terrorism. I can see how one could establish a “racket” to do this. This probably did not cross the charity’s mind. Of course, in my mind, they freed people, all or most Christian I would think, I’m glad they did it. I believe I remember this particular situation. I’ve followed the situation over there rather closely, it never dawned on me that “paying ransoms” = “financing terrorism”.
Story:
http://aina.org/news/20190714143045.htm
Any thoughts?UK Police Investigate If Assyrian Charity Paid Ransom to ISIS
By Jamie Prentis
UK police are investigating a Christian charity to determine if it financed terrorism after its chairman was involved in the freeing of 226 hostages held by ISIS in Syria in 2016.
The Assyrian Church of the East Relief Organisation (Acero) is chaired by the bishop of Syria, Mar Afram Athneil, but is run by Andy Darmoo, 71, who is the director of a lighting company in southern England.
In its financial statements for the year ended July 31, 2016, Acero has an expenditure of £147,689 (Dh682,000) marked as “Iraq Hostages”. An Associated Press report in 2016 described Mr Athneil as being “almost exclusively” behind the year-long brokering of the deal to free the hostages. Three were murdered on camera by ISIS.
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