by EthicsDaily.com Staff | Jan 26, 2016 | News
The end of Sudan’s two-decade civil war in 2005 brought hope, but not stability or lasting peace. A peace treaty led eventually to a 2011 referendum that resulted in South Sudan becoming a free and independent nation. The triumph would be short-lived, however,... by Brian Kaylor | Jul 24, 2015 | News
Corneille Gato Munyamasoko, general secretary of the Association of Baptist Churches in Rwanda (AEBR), received the 2015 Baptist World Alliance Congress Quinquennial Human Rights Award. The presentation came on Thursday during the Baptist World Congress in Durban,... by Elijah Brown | Apr 21, 2015 | Opinion
Sin festers in the darkness. The same is often true in the politics of oppression. Genocide, a term first used in 1944 to describe the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, political or cultural group, breeds in the shadows. Torture, rape and whole scale... by Martin Brooks | Jun 16, 2014 | Opinion
I remember sometime in my educational process becoming aware of and wrestling with the term “benevolent dictator.” As a Western, independent child of the Enlightenment, I had assumed all dictators were bad dictators. I had only heard the word used in a... by BWA Staff | Feb 19, 2014 | News
Baptists in Africa have expressed deep displeasure at ongoing conflicts on the continent that have led to “wanton destruction of life and property of defenseless and vulnerable citizens.” Making special reference to the Central African Republic (CAR),...