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  • 11 Killed in Coordinated Attacks on Iraqi Christians

    Los Angeles Times
    August 2, 2004 Monday
    Home Edition

    The World;
    11 Killed in Coordinated Attacks on Iraqi Christians

    by Henry Chu, Times Staff Writer


    In a wave of coordinated attacks aimed at Iraq's Christian minority,
    a series of bombs exploded Sunday outside five churches thronged with
    worshipers here and in the northern city of Mosul, killing 11 people
    and injuring dozens more.

    It was the first time in this nation's 15-month insurgency that Iraqi
    Christians were targeted, further fraying the country's delicate
    religious fabric and raising fears of increased sectarian conflict.

    Attackers timed some of the blasts for maximum effect, during evening
    services that attracted hundreds of faithful. Bloodied and dazed,
    churchgoers spilled onto streets littered with shards of stained
    glass and splinters of wood as smoke billowed above them.

    "I was praying inside the church with all these people when all the
    windows shattered," said Father Rafael Kutaimi of an Assyrian
    Catholic church in Baghdad's Karada neighborhood, where a car packed
    with explosives blew up during the 6 p.m. service. At least a dozen
    worshipers were wounded.

    "They came into a holy place," Kutaimi said of the attackers, as
    bystanders scurried away from U.S. armored vehicles that had rolled
    to the scene. "If they're against the Americans, let them kill the
    Americans. We're all Iraqis, innocent people. I don't know what their
    goal is."

    Within an hour, four churches were hit in three neighborhoods in the
    Iraqi capital. The Iraqi Ministry of Health said early today that 11
    people had died and 52 were injured.

    In perhaps the deadliest of the attacks, twin blasts struck the
    Chaldean Patriarchate in southern Baghdad, killing a child and at
    least four other people as churchgoers began arriving for Mass around
    sunset. Witnesses said they saw two men pull up in separate cars,
    park them near the church, then casually walk away before the
    vehicles exploded, hurling debris as far as 100 yards.

    The church served as a bomb shelter during last year's U.S. invasion,
    and local residents, Muslims and Christians alike, banded together to
    protect it from looters. "We have all lived here in peace for a long
    time," said Ali Abdulla, 28, who rushed from his house across the
    street to help the injured.

    Around the same time as the Baghdad explosions, at least one car bomb
    went off outside a church in Mosul, incinerating a passing motorist
    and wounding four other people. The toll could have been higher if
    all the mortar shells in the car had detonated, police said.

    It was not immediately clear if any of the bombings were suicide
    attacks. U.S. military officials here said the bombs seemed crudely
    made, casting doubt on whether fugitive militant leader Abu Musab
    Zarqawi had masterminded the plan.

    Still, the organized assault punctured the sense of relative immunity
    that many of Iraq's 800,000 Christians had felt, not only during the
    bloodshed of the last year but stretching back to the reign of Saddam
    Hussein, who actively cultivated the support of religious minorities
    as a bulwark against the country's Shiite Muslim majority. Better
    educated than many Iraqis, Christians here have traditionally
    exercised an influence disproportionate to their small numbers.
    Former Deputy Prime Minister Tarik Aziz, now in U.S. custody, is a
    Christian who was a powerful player in Hussein's inner circle.

    Many Christian professionals and businesspeople have fled Iraq in the
    last 30 years for better economic opportunities and to escape
    periodic outbreaks of hostility against them. In the late 1980s,
    during a campaign against ethnic Kurds in northern Iraq, Hussein's
    forces destroyed scores of Christian villages, demolished ancient
    monasteries and churches, and forcibly moved Christians to Baghdad.

    In addition to Sunday's bombings -- which elicited a condemnation
    from the Vatican -- recent weeks have seen a nationwide rise in
    attacks on liquor and record stores, whose owners are often
    Christians and whose wares are forbidden by strict Muslims.

    Although some Christians predicted that more of them would want to
    flee Iraq, others pledged to stay, such as engineer Skender
    Melconian, 59, a leader among Armenian Christians. "This community
    has been in Baghdad since 1911," he said. "Now is the time for Iraqis
    to build their country out of the ashes. But there's a drive from
    some people to move us backward."

    In March, four American Christian missionary workers were shot to
    death in Mosul, though it was unclear whether they were targeted
    because of their religion or because they were foreigners. Sunday's
    attack was the first coordinated assault aimed at Iraqi Christians.

    An Armenian Christian church in the Karada neighborhood was the first
    to be targeted. It is a few blocks from the Assyrian Catholic church,
    which was hit about half an hour later, leaving a smoking crater.

    Soon after the second bombing, officials with the U.S.-led
    multinational forces ordered Iraqi police to sweep other churches in
    the city. Officers found an unexploded device in one, which U.S.
    teams disabled.

    The operation could not be mounted quickly enough to prevent two more
    explosions, one outside the Chaldean Patriarchate in the southern
    district of Dora and the other in New Baghdad, a working-class
    neighborhood to the east.

    The apparent target was St. Elya's Chaldean Church, but an adjacent
    Shiite mosque, its minaret almost nuzzling the church's cross, bore
    the brunt of the blast. Onlookers said funerals were being held at
    both houses of worship when the car bomb detonated.

    Maher Mahmoud Mohammed, 35, whose barbershop sits near the mosque and
    the church, was outside when the bomb exploded. He said the force of
    the blast knocked him down and punched out his shop's windows. He
    struggled to get up, then bolted, joining dozens of others who had
    poured out of the two religious buildings.

    Minutes later, he sat in a hospital, the left half of his tank top
    scarlet from the blood that seeped from his cuts. His anger at those
    responsible was just as inflamed. "These are cowards and criminals,"
    he said as victims in adjacent rooms screamed in pain. "They're not
    Muslims."

    On a nearby gurney, the mosque's elderly spiritual leader, Sayyed
    Qassim, lay naked and blackened, his body smeared with salve, his
    quavering voice saying the name of Allah over and over.

    His son rushed in, collapsing to the floor and clapping his hands to
    his face as he cried out, "Father! Father!" The holy man's followers
    crowded into the hospital, some of them sobbing.

    At the scene of the blast, Nazhat Abd was outraged.

    "What are they targeting? Churches and mosques are places to give
    prayers to God. It's the same. These terrorists don't differentiate
    between anybody anymore, between innocent and guilty, Christian and
    Muslim."

    *

    Times staff writers Megan K. Stack, Edmund Sanders and Alissa J.
    Rubin contributed to this story.

    *

    Bombs target Christians

    Bomb blasts rocked four Christian churches during evening services in
    Baghdad and one church in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul on Sunday,
    killing at least six people and wounding dozens of others.

    Iraq's Christian minority

    Christians total about 800,000, or about 3% of Iraq's 24 million
    population, and live mainly in Baghdad.

    Christians were free to worship under Saddam Hussein, who, despite
    his persecution of majority Shiites, officially preached religious
    tolerance.

    Christians are worried that religious tolerance could suffer in
    post-Hussein Iraq and have said they fear persecution from Muslims
    who associate them with the U.S.-led multinational forces, who are
    seen as coming from Christian nations.

    There has been a string of attacks in recent weeks on liquor and
    record stores throughout Iraq, whose owners are often Christians.

    Explosions

    1. A bomb explodes near an Armenian church in Baghdad's Karada
    neighborhood.

    2. A car bomb explodes at an Assyrian Catholic church in Karada.

    3. A car bomb explodes outside a Chaldean Christian church in
    Baghdad's Dora district. Five people are killed.

    4. A bomb explodes between a Chaldean church and a mosque in New
    Baghdad.

    5. At least one car bomb explodes outside a church in Mosul. One
    person is killed.

    Sources: Reuters, Times staff

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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