Philippine church bombing was carried out by Indonesian couple, says interior minister

The Philippine interior minister said an Indonesian couple with ties to an Islamic State-linked group are behind a church bombing that killed 20 people last weekend. 

The Christian community in the Philippines was badly shaken by the attack on the cathedral on the mainly Muslim island of Jolo, in the country's southern Sulu province.  

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack, which came days after a peaceful referendum that resulted in a vote favouring autonomy for majority Muslim parts of the Mindanao.  

The island region of Mindanao has been under martial law since May 2017 when terrorists affiliated with ISIS stormed Marawi City and engaged in a five-month standoff with government forces.

On Friday, Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said the evidence, including eye witness accounts, pointed to an Indonesian man and his wife being behind Sunday's church attack.

'They are Indonesians,' Año, a former military chief, told CNN Philippines' News Night. 'I am certain that they are Indonesians.'

He said the pair had been helped by radical Islamist militant group Abu Sayyaf.

'There are two foreigners involved in the bombing and they were aided by local Abu Sayyaf who acted as guide, and probably conducted preliminary surveillance prior to the bombing,' Año said.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said it appeared to be a suicide bombing, which if confirmed would make it one of the first in the country.

On Wednesday, a deadly grenade attack on a mosque in the largely Christian province of Zamboanga, in the south-west of the Philippines, killed two people. It is unclear who carried out the attack.

Zamboanga is close to Jolo, a stronghold of Abu Sayyaf, a group notorious for its kidnappings.

News
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech

A church leader was apparently warned by a police officer that a Bible verse displayed on the back of his campervan could be considered "hate speech" in certain contexts.

Younger generations lead surprising revival in Bible reading
Younger generations lead surprising revival in Bible reading

After years of steady decline, Americans are rediscovering the Bible — and young adults are leading the way.

A Christian response to Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's fall from grace
A Christian response to Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's fall from grace

The danger we run into when we read the public reports of the misdeeds of some person who has become the object of public disgrace is that we become tempted to entertain the idea that we are somehow better in the eyes of God than that person

Anglicans meet in India to tackle modern slavery
Anglicans meet in India to tackle modern slavery

More than a fifth of the world's currently enslaved population are believed to live in India.