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  • IRAQ: Violence Now Corners Christians

    IRAQ: VIOLENCE NOW CORNERS CHRISTIANS
    By Mohammed A. Salih

    Inter Press Service, Italy
    June 13 2007

    ARBIL, Iraq, Jun 13 (IPS) - For Janet Petros's family it all started
    when the al-Mahdi militia of the radical Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr
    took control of their mixed neighbourhood Hay Muwasalat in Baghdad
    last year.

    That was after long fighting between Shia and Sunni armed groups for
    dominance in the area.

    One summer morning, Janet's younger daughter Maha Faiq, 26, was hit
    in the leg by a bullet as she slept. She was lucky it was no worse.

    It was not an accidental shot. Janet's family, the only Christian
    family in that district, had been harassed and threatened by the
    militias on both sides for long to follow their imposed Sharia rules.

    "It was a very bad situation in Baghdad," said Sahar Faiq, 28, Janet's
    elder daughter. "We couldn't mix with the neighbours any more and
    were so afraid." Sahar quit her job with a British security company
    after being threatened by militias.

    Last February, Janet's family decided to move to Arbil, in the
    relatively safe Kurdistan region in the north. "After what happened,
    I was afraid that someone will come in and do something bad to my
    daughters," Janet, 55, told IPS in her two-room house in Arbil's
    Christian district Ainkawa.

    Christians, who have lived in peace with their Muslim neighbours for
    years are today badly hit by the rising tide of religious extremism.

    In his meeting with U.S. President George W. Bush in the Vatican last
    week, the Pope expressed concern that "the society that is evolving
    (in Iraq) would not tolerate the Christian religion."

    That is already happening. Hundreds of Christians have been killed,
    their churches bombed and a ferocious campaign is under way to
    intimidate them, particularly in the insecure parts of the country.

    Iraq's Christians are divided into a number of sects like the
    Chaldeans, who form the majority, Assyrians, who are descendants of
    the ancient Assyrian empire, Armenians and Syriacs.

    During Saddam Hussein's reign, Christians lived in a largely secular
    atmosphere and were protected from extremism. But many did face
    discrimination and attempts to get them to conform to Arab cultural
    ways.

    A small minority, many Christians have either left the volatile parts
    of the country for safer areas, or moved outside Iraq.

    The Kurdish region is now home to thousands of Christian families who
    have escaped violence in cities like Baghdad and the northern city
    Mosul. The recent killing of several Christian clergymen in Mosul
    could push many others to leave.

    About 2,800 Christian families have moved to Arbil, and another 1,550
    to Zakho on the Iraqi-Turkish border, according to the Hizel Cultural
    Centre, a Christian group that offers aid to displaced families.

    Life in the north is safer but not easy. The huge influx of tens
    of thousands of refugees has led to a sharp increase in rents and
    prices. Inflation is rising and job opportunities are decreasing.

    Janet's family pays 600 dollars a month for their two-room house.

    Father Sabri al-Maqdasi, a priest in Ainkawa's largest church
    Saint Joseph believes that given the continuous flow of refugees,
    accommodation will be extremely hard to find. The group Hadyab
    Financial Aid for Refugees offers 100 dollars a month to each Christian
    family coming to Arbil, but that money does not go far.

    With attacks and pressure rising, there are attempts by some leaders
    to create a Christian zone in the historically Christian populated
    areas of Nineveh and Dohuk provinces in the north.

    But there is no agreement on this. Some are asking for an autonomous
    territory within Kurdistan region where Christians will have their
    own regional government and parliament. Others demand a self-rule
    arrangement where Christians control the local administration and
    police force in the areas they constitute the majority.

    Father al-Maqdasi says a separated homeland will isolate Christians
    from the rest of Iraq and would "destroy our mission of building
    bridges and relations with other religions." Instead, he encourages
    a plan for Christians to have self-rule in effect as in Ainkawa in
    Arbil, where the local administration is run by Christians.

    The wounds caused by the ongoing violence against Christians are not
    going to be healed easily. The suffering has given rise to a sense
    of alienation and detachment among many.

    "The only dream we now have is to leave Iraq," Janet told IPS. "We
    don't feel that we belong to this country any more."

    http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnew s=38149
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