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AP Interview: First Iraqi Cardinal Says Fear Still Pervades Country;

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  • AP Interview: First Iraqi Cardinal Says Fear Still Pervades Country;

    AP INTERVIEW: FIRST IRAQI CARDINAL SAYS FEAR STILL PERVADES COUNTRY; CALLS FOR EMIGRES' RETURN

    The Associated PressPublished
    December 24, 2007

    BAGHDAD: Fear still pervades life in Iraq despite a recent reduction
    in violence, the spiritual leader of Iraq's Catholics said Monday,
    making a Christmas appeal for refugees who have fled the country to
    return nonetheless.

    The U.S. military has said there has been a 60 percent reduction
    in violence since June, and the incessant sound of car bombs and
    gunfire that used to fill the days in central Baghdad has clearly
    abated. During the past few days of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha,
    Iraq appears to been living through some of the most peaceful moments
    since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

    But security is still poor and many Iraqis fear to venture far
    from home.

    Armed gangs and militias roam city streets, car bombs and suicide
    bombers attack markets, police patrols and liquor stores, and the
    dead bodies of tortured kidnap victims turn up almost daily along
    river banks or dumped on the streets.

    "Let's hope that it's getting better, but I think that it's the same,"
    Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, leader of the ancient Chaldean Church
    and Iraq's first cardinal, said in an interview with The Associated
    Press on Christmas Eve. "Because everyone is still afraid to go
    out. ... Because of the car bombs, etc., and other things. Even small
    animals are afraid of the danger."

    As he spoke, a bomb hidden inside a minivan bus exploded a couple of
    miles away near the Baghdad governor's office, killing two people and
    wounding six. The blast wasn't audible at Delly's guarded compound
    in west Baghdad.

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    smoking"We hope that it gets better. ... We are always the children
    of hope. We must have this hope, and be always optimistic and not
    pessimistic," said the red-robed Delly, the lights on a Christmas
    tree twinkling behind him.

    Christians have often been targeted by Islamic extremists, forcing
    tens of thousands to flee and isolating many of those who remained
    in neighborhoods protected by barricades and checkpoints. Less than
    3 percent of Iraq's 26 million people are Christians -- the majority
    of which are Chaldean-Assyrians and Armenians, with small numbers of
    Roman Catholics.

    Attacks against Christians peaked with a coordinated bombing campaign
    in 2004 against churches in Baghdad, and several priests have been
    kidnapped.

    Anti-Christian violence also flared last September after Pope Benedict
    XVI made comments perceived to be against Islam.

    Delly, who was elevated to the rank of cardinal last month at the age
    of 80, appealed to the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who have fled
    the country to return.

    "My message is always the message of our Lord Jesus Christ, who taught
    us to love one another, to have charity towards everyone. And for
    the emigrants to return home, to work for the good of their country
    and their homeland despite the situation which their country is in,"
    he said. "That is my hope."

    The cardinal, who has been outspoken in the past about the need to
    protect Christians, called for unity among Iraqis of all faiths.

    "These days call us especially for love. Christmas is the celebration
    of peace," said Delly.

    "My message to (Iraqis), all of them, is a message of peace and
    brotherhood and mutual cooperation because we are all the sons of
    one family," he said.

    "Yes, every person in this family has his own name, and his name
    is dear to him, but all of us, we must all work to make this family
    flourish, by fearing God and doing good."

    Christians, Delly said, were as much a part of Iraq as anyone else.

    "For 14 generations we've lived in brotherhood and equality with our
    Muslim brothers. We are sons of this country, we are not foreigners,
    we are not a minority," he said. "We are a small number, but not a
    minority. We love this country and work together with one hand for
    Iraq to flourish, now and in the future."

    Iraq's Christian community were generally left alone under Saddam. One
    of them, Tariq Aziz, served as foreign minister and deputy prime
    minister. He surrendered to U.S. forces in Baghdad shortly after
    Saddam's regime was toppled in 2003, and has remained imprisoned ever
    since, despite appeals for his release.

    Delly said he had tried repeatedly to visit the ailing Aziz for
    religious reason, but was denied access.

    "I pray for his sake and for the sake of all people imprisoned and
    who remain in prison until this day," he said. "I ask from God that
    all of them return to their homes, safely and in health."

    Sectarian violence in Iraq has declined in recent months due largely
    to a surge by thousands of U.S. troops, the help of Sunni Arab
    irregulars who have turned against al-Qaida in Iraq and are now on
    the U.S. payroll, and a cease-fire by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada
    al-Sadr and his Mahdi Army.
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