Concerns for welfare of nuns and priests stranded in Afghanistan

America's 20 year war in Afghanistan came to a chaotic end after the Taliban reclaimed power in a matter of days. (Photo: Channel 4 News)

Prayers are being sought for the safety of two Jesuit priests and four nuns stranded in Afghanistan.

One of the priests is Fr Jerome Sequeira, from India, who headed up the Jesuit Refugee Service's Afghanistan division until the Taliban takeover.

The Jesuit Refugee Service has now suspended all of its operations in Afghanistan indefinitely.

Fr Sequeira says he tried to go to Kabul airport to catch a flight back to India but found that the airport staff had already abandoned the place and the Taliban were shooting into the air to control the crowds, Vatican News reports.

He described the chaos on the streets as "terrifying" and unlike anything he had experienced in his 15 years in the country.

In a message to friends and colleagues, Fr Sequeira said, "Thank you for your continuous prayers for our safety. The way the situation is changing in the country, it is anyone's imagination ... safety does not make sense here. It is a chaotic situation."

The stranded nuns belong to the Missionaries of Charity, founded by Mother Teresa. Their whereabouts are unknown.

Jesuit Father Robert Rodrigues, also from India, is trapped in Bamiyan in central Afghanistan.

He was at Bamiyan airport on August 15 waiting to take a United Nations flight to Kabul when the airport was suddenly abandoned by security personnel.

Fr Sequeira said that Fr Rodrigues is safe and that he is working with UN agencies to evacuate the priest from Bamiyan to Kabul.

He also voiced fears that things may soon worsen for the people of Afghanistan.

"They [the Taliban] are not harming the civilians at the moment but it will come once they have fully captured all the systems of the country," he said.

News
Darlington nurse describes brave stand for biological reality in US speech
Darlington nurse describes brave stand for biological reality in US speech

The NHS has been "ideologically captured" by transgenderism, nurse Bethany Hutchison said at an event on Capitol Hill in Washington DC.

Scots families send clear signal to government over home education
Scots families send clear signal to government over home education

Proposals could disproportionately impact children with special needs or disabilities.

Is New Zealand experiencing its own 'Quiet Revival'?
Is New Zealand experiencing its own 'Quiet Revival'?

The so-called “Quiet Revival” report by the Bible Society noting an upsurge in Christianity among young people in the U.K. is also seen to an extent among young New Zealanders, according to a report by Baptists. 

Worship leader Ron Kenoly dies at 81
Worship leader Ron Kenoly dies at 81

Ron Kenoly, a pioneering Christian worship leader whose anthems helped shape modern praise music and whose ministry emphasized worship as service rather than performance, has died. He was 81.