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  • Mosul Christian Community Dwindles

    IWPR Institute for War and Peace
    Mosul Christian Community Dwindles
    Many go abroad to escape the threat of violence, while others seek
    refuge in the countryside around Mosul.
    By Sahar al-Haideri in Mosul (ICR No. 230, 7-Aug-07

    They have been threatened because of their Christian faith, their
    distinctive clothing and their success in business. They have been
    killed because of a controversy over a cartoon. They have fled to
    wherever they can find a minimal amount of safety - to Iraqi
    Kurdistan, abroad to Syria, or just to the countryside outside their
    city.

    The Christians of Mosul can recite one horror story after
    another. Once a solid, middle-class community in this northern city,
    thousands of them have fled their homes under threat from
    militants. Their churches have been bombed, their clergy murdered, and
    community members regularly face threats and kidnappings.

    The story of Mosul's Christians is not dissimilar to that of millions
    of other Iraqi citizens who live in a state of fear. But their
    religion makes them especially vulnerable, in a city where governance
    and the rule of law are non-existent, allowing criminal gangs and
    Islamic militant groups such as al-Qaeda to intimidate and kill with
    impunity.

    "Life has become difficult in Mosul," said Ilham Sabah, a Christian
    attorney who wears the veil because she fears she would otherwise be
    killed. "The militants threaten Christian women. They set them on fire
    or kill them if they refuse to wear Islamic dress as Muslim women do.

    "We only have one choice, and that is to flee Mosul and the hell
    created by the militants."

    Mosul is the capital of Nineveh province, and has been home to
    Christians of theAssyrian, Chaldean, Armenian and Catholic churches
    for more than millennium. Now they are being driven out en masse.

    Christians "are the weakest of the weak", said Joseph Kassab,
    originally from Mosul and now executive director of the Chaldean
    Federation of America.

    `The extremists there are highly active... they want to empty Mosul of
    Iraqi Christians," he said.

    There are no accurate demographic statistics for Iraq, but most
    estimates indicate there were between 800,000 and one million Iraqi
    Christians in Iraq in 2003. A 2005 report by the United Nations High
    Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR, on non-Muslim religious minorities
    in Iraq said that most of the Christians were from Nineveh province,
    although substantial numbers lived and worked in Baghdad.

    UNHCR reported last year that about 24 per cent of the Iraqi refugees
    in Syria, which borders Nineveh province, were Christians. In
    addition, about 1,720 Christian families have fled Mosul for the
    relative safety of the Nineveh Plains outside the city, according to a
    Christian human rights advocate in the province who requested
    anonymity out of concern for his security. Thousands of Christians
    from Baghdad and other parts of Iraq have also fled to the plains.

    Christians, many of whom were successful entrepreneurs and
    professionals, were some of Iraq's first refugees.

    Community leaders in Nineveh province have faced increased threats in
    the wake of the furore created by a Danish newspaper's publication
    last year of caricatures making fun of the Prophet Mohammed and
    linking Islam with terrorism. A controversial speech by Pope Benedict
    XVI in September 2006, which many Muslims perceived as anti-Islamic,
    also made Christians a target.

    By mid-October, a bomb had killed nine people in an Assyrian
    neighbourhood of Mosul, and Syriac priest Paulos Iskandar was beheaded
    after being kidnapped by a militant group. His abductors demanded at
    least 250,000 US dollars in ransom and also that he post signs on his
    church apologising for the Pope's remarks, according to the Assyrian
    International News Agency. They killed him two days after his
    abduction.

    The murder sent shock-waves through Mosul's Christian community,

    The violence has not abated since Iskandar's gruesome murder. Father
    Ragheed Ganni, a Chaldean Catholic priest at the Church of the Holy
    Spirit, and three of his deacons were gunned down in Mosul in June
    following a Sunday service. Ganni had been threatened and his church
    bombed prior to the attack.

    The four were shot dead when their vehicle was pulled over by armed
    gunmen. The militants then rigged the car with explosives, and it took
    several hours before a bomb-disposal unit arrived to defuse the
    charges.

    Less high-profile kidnappings, threats and killings of Christians
    rarely make the news, but they occur almost daily. The Assyrian
    National Assembly tracks violence against Assyrian Christians in Iraq,
    and the daily online log of murders and other violent acts includes a
    plethora of kidnappings targeting Mosul's Christians.

    Many Christians are kidnapped for ransom because they are successful
    businessmen, although most have fled or shut down their operations in
    Mosul since 2003.

    In one case last month, the assembly reported that Dawood Qoryaqos
    Hermis Farfash, a father of five, was carjacked and abducted in
    Mosul's al-Tahreer district. Earlier this year, Dawood was kidnapped
    in the same area and released after his family paid a ransom of 3.5
    million Iraqi dinars, or about 2,800 dollars.

    The frequent attacks on churches and clergy have kept many away from
    services. Mosul used to have 23 churches, but many are no longer open
    and Christians often opt to practice their faith in secret, according
    to the human rights advocate.

    "Life was better under Saddam," said a 35-year-old Christian
    businessman in Mosul who asked not to be named because he feared
    retaliation by militant groups. "I used to go out socially and was
    well-respected, but not any more. In the past, there was law and
    order, but now nothing stops the extremists or criminals."

    This man, a lifelong Mosul resident, lives in a neighbourhood where
    Christians are in a minority, and says most of his friends are
    Muslims. His brother left Mosul after his child was kidnapped and he
    himself was threatened earlier this year.

    Mosul's long history of religious and ethnic coexistence has not,
    however, disappeared because of the violence.

    "I and many of my friends and colleagues hurt just as much when a
    Christian is murdered as when a Muslim is killed," said Salim
    Abdul-Wahad, a Muslim teacher in Mosul.

    Kassab and the Christian rights advocate both said the security
    problems stem from a lack of government control over the province as a
    whole and Mosul in particular. Kassab said the province is so chaotic
    that it is often unclear who is attacking whom, or why. Christians may
    be specifically targeted by Islamic extremists, he said, but the
    perpetrators could also be criminal gangs or militias affiliated with
    political parties.

    "Everyone is subject to violence," said Kassab, adding that the
    security forces "can't function, they can't provide safety and
    security very well in general. So how are they going to safeguard a
    minority in the community?"

    He said the security forces were "busy protecting themselves,
    protecting their establishments. It's hard to protect everyone in that
    area, and they don't have the resources, either".

    Michael Youash, project director for the Washington-based Iraq
    Sustainable Democracy Project, which advocates on behalf of Iraqi
    religious minorities, says the United States has not done enough to
    defend minority rights in Iraq even though many of the smaller
    religious groups supported the US-led overthrow of former Iraqi leader
    Saddam Hussein.

    "America has shown with abundant clarity that it's not willing to lift
    a finger on this issue," he said.

    Christians from Mosul and other parts of Iraq such as Baghdad have
    fled in droves to the Nineveh Plains, which many Assyrians consider
    their homeland. There are other minority groups - Turkoman, Yazidis
    and Shabaks - living in this area, which consists of the Tel Kaif,
    al-Hamdaniya and al-Shikhan districts to the southeast, east and north
    of Mosul. The area borders on the Dohuk and Erbil provinces of Iraqi
    Kurdistan.

    "The Nineveh Plain is a bit of an oasis in terms of safety, and the
    main reason is because the communities really do know each other,"
    said Youash. "Even with the new arrivals, they tend to know each
    other."

    The number of internally displaced persons, or IDPs, seeking refuge in
    the Nineveh Plains rose to more than 10,000 families five months ago,
    including 1,000 from the Shabak community. Nineveh province has nearly
    90,000 IDPs, the second-largest for any province in the country,
    according to a July report by the International Organisation for
    Migration.

    The largely agrarian plains have remained fairly safe for Christians
    and other minorities. They are partially controlled by the Kurdistan
    Regional Government and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, KDP, which is
    dominant in Erbil and Dohuk.

    Assyrians claim the Kurdish government and the KDP have discriminated
    against them, including confiscating land and disenfranchising
    Christian voters in the 2005 elections. The Kurdish government would
    like to incorporate much of the Nineveh Plain into its area of rule,
    but many residents want to create a special administrative area of
    their own there.

    "There isn't necessarily a special solution for Christians, because
    any solution needs to address all political, security and economic
    concerns through Iraq," said the human rights activist. "But
    Christians want their own autonomous region with the Shabak and the
    Yazidis in the Nineveh Plains."

    Youash agreed, saying,"This is what's needed to save these people."

    Advocates for a special territory run by minorities on the Nineveh
    Plains cite the Iraqi constitution, which guarantees administrative
    rights for minorities such as Turkoman, Chaldeans and Assyrians.

    If momentum gains for a minority-run area in Nineveh, it will probably
    be fiercely opposed by the Kurds and perhaps other political groups.

    Still, Youash and other Assyrian advocates are lobbying for US support
    for the plan and more support for the plains region. The over 82,000
    Assyrians living in the US have formed a formidable lobby.

    The US Senate is currently considering a bill that would give 10
    million dollars in aid to help religious minorities in the Nineveh
    Plains. It has already passed in the House of Representatives.

    Unless they have security backed up by strong governance, the
    Christians of Nineveh fear they will disappear altogether.

    "Most of us have fled abroad, and this is a serious concern," said
    Mosul resident Afram Abdul-Ahad, who lost his small restaurant and
    some family members because of targeted violence against
    Christians. "We're worried about the future of Christians in Iraq."

    IWPR Mosul correspondent Sahar al-Haideri was murdered in the city in
    June. IWPR Middle East editor Tiare Rath and an IWPR Iraq
    correspondent contributed additional material to this report.
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