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Many Christian woman and children in Northern Sudan are separated from their
families and endure increased persecution from an increasing Mulslim populationThe
Barnabas FundAn international relief agency plans to airlift some 3,400
Christians out of Sudan, where they face increasing persecution from the
Islamist government.The Barnabas Fund has already whisked about 5,000 Christians
from the embattled country, where President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has vowed
to create a a 100 percent Islamic constitution, without communism or secularism
or Western [influences]. The Christians will be taken to South Sudan, a
smaller nation formed in 2011 where religious freedom is better tolerated.We
launched this as major global initiative, and have had such a tremendous
response from the Christian community, Julian Dobbs, a bishop and honorary
director for the Baranbas Fund, told FoxNews.com.The situation for Christians
who have remained behind has proven to create hardships for them, especially
for women and children."The Barnabas Fund's airlifting project began in
August 2012, but only recently has the organization secured funds for a
second phase.Sharia law is heavily enforced in Sudan, where nearly 98 percent
of the population is Muslim.It has made it very difficult, if not
impossible, for Christians to worship, Dobbs also said. There is also no
access for food and proper safety.Many families were also forcibly split
from their loved ones as the press
d-picked"
instructors.Schneiderman is suing the program, Trump as the university chairman,
and the former president of the university in a case to be
handled in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. He accuses them of engaging
in persistent fraud, illegal and deceptive conduct and violating federal
consumer protection law. The $40 million he seeks is mostly to pay
restitution to consumers.He dismissed Trump's claim of a political motive."The
fact that he's still brave enough to follow the investigation wherever it
may lead speaks to Mr. Schneiderman's character," Schneiderman spokesman
Andrew Friedman told AP.State Education Department officials had told Trump
to change the name of his enterprise years ago, saying it lacked
a license and didn't meet the legal definitions of a university. In
2011 it was renamed the Trump Entrepreneur Institute, but it has been
dogged since by complaints from consumers and a few isolated civil lawsuits
claiming it didn't fulfill its advertised claims.Schneiderman's lawsuit
covers complaints dating to 2005 through 2011. Students paid between $1,495
and $35,000 to learn from the Manhattan mogul who wrote the best
seller, "Art of the Deal" a decade ago followed by "How to
Get Rich" and "Think Like a Billionaire."Scheiderman said the three-day
seminars didn't, as promised, teach consumers everything they needed to
know about real estate. The Trump University manual tells instructors not
to let consumers "think
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