Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




IRAQ WARS
Iraqi Christians fear fate of departed Jews
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) March 13, 2013


Kurd rebels free Turkish prisoners in north Iraq
Al-Amadiyah, Iraq (AFP) March 13, 2013 - The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) on Tuesday freed eight Turkish prisoners held for two years in northern Iraq, as part of a new peace push by Ankara to end a 29-year-old insurgency.

The release of the eight captives, including security officers and civil servants, came after a request by jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan, who said last month that he hoped to see prisoners "reach their families."

"Responding to the call of our leader Abdullah Ocalan, today we handed over eight prisoners to a Turkish delegation," Bawer Pirson, a senior PKK security leader, told a news conference near Al-Amadiyah, a town about 30 kilometres (18 miles) from the Turkish border.

"We hope that our attempts succeed to develop a peace process."

He added: "The release was initiated with good intentions from our side."

"Today the ball is in Turkey's court, and they have to demonstrate their goodwill to develop a peace process."

Earlier, Husamettin Zenderlioglu, a member of the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) who was part of the delegation receiving the prisoners, said the group had been received safely.

Zenderlioglu, who was in northern Iraq, spoke to an AFP correspondent near Turkey's border with Iraq.

The PKK is branded by Turkey and much of the international community as a terrorist group."

The Turkish captives are expected to be sent with the delegation to Turkey through the Habur border crossing to meet their families and will be "transferred to the nearest airport," Interior Minister Muammer Guler said ahead of the release.

After 10 years of attacks on Iraqi Christians, Monsignor Pios Cacha wonders if the ancient community's days are numbered.

"Maybe we will follow in the steps of our Jewish brothers," he says.

The priest's reference to Iraq's Jewish population -- once a thriving community numbering in the tens of thousands but now practically non-existent -- neatly sums up the possible fate of Iraq's Christians.

The 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq ended Saddam Hussein's disastrous rule, but also turned the country into a battleground between insurgents and foreign troops, unleashing a wave of bombings and killings by militants in which Christians were not only caught in the crossfire, but targeted themselves.

The bloodiest single attack on the community happened on October 31, 2010, when Islamist militants killed 44 worshippers and two priests in Baghdad's Our Lady of Salvation church.

Cacha compiled a book documenting the attack and its aftermath.

Some pictures in the book were taken soon after the assault, when bodies including those of young children still lay in pools of blood on the church's dusty, rubble-strewn floor. Others show later scenes including memorials for the dead, and the wounded in hospital.

The attack "was a catastrophe for the Christians, and it broke the back of our presence in this country," says Cacha. "It is the catastrophe that led to emptying the country of Christians."

The UN refugee agency said thousands fled after the October 31 attack, which was claimed by Al-Qaeda.

Estimates of the number of Christians living in Iraq before 2003 vary from more than one million to around 1.5 million. But repeated attacks by Islamist groups pushed many to leave, and now they are estimated at less than 500,000.

-- Churches remain targets ---

Between 2003 and May 2012, some 900 Christians were killed, while 200 were kidnapped, tortured and ultimately released for exorbitant ransoms, according to the Iraq-based Hammurabi Organisation for Human Rights (HOHR).

Around 325,000 Christians have left their homes for other areas of Iraq, according to the organisation.

"There were 300 churches in Iraq, and now there are only 57 left. Even those that remain are targets," according to Louis Sako, newly-elected Patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church, the largest Christian church in Iraq.

Figures at the local level are similarly bleak.

Cacha said of the 1,300 families that once frequented his church, there are now only 400-500, while a Chaldean priest put the figure for Christian families in the southern port city of Basra at 450, less than half the 1,150 families in 2003.

All that despite being Christians, being among the ethnic and religious minorities represented in the Iraqi parliament -- Christians have one cabinet minister, five MPs, and hold provincial council seats in Baghdad, Nineveh in the north and Basra in the south.

Apart from those cities, the community is concentrated in the Kirkuk, Dohuk and Arbil.

The vast majority are part of Sako's Chaldean Church, an Eastern Rite Church recognized by Rome which uses Aramaic, the ancient language that Jesus Christ would have spoken.

The situation in the wider Middle East region is also causing concern for Christians and other minorities as Islamists take an increasingly tighter grip on power following the Arab Spring.

"The coming years will be very difficult for Christian groups in the Middle East and the Arab world. There will be challenges for how to secure them and protect their rights, privacy of religion and traditions," said Saad Sirop Hanna of Mar Yusuf Church in central Baghdad.

"I don't know how mature the political leaders and politicians of the Arab Spring are to understand this challenge," he said, also expressing fears that Christians could get caught up in a conflict between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

The future of Iraq's Christian community ultimately hinges on whether the current lack of security and jobs can be resolved.

"Many Christian youth want to emigrate, and when I ask them why, they say, 'Give us jobs to live and safety to stay,' and that is something I cannot answer," said former migration minister Pascal Wardeh, who now heads the HOHR.

If the violence and instability continues, it risks driving the once-thriving Christian population, like Iraq's Jews, out of the country and into the history books.

.


Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








IRAQ WARS
Iraq attacks kill 12, wound 165
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) March 11, 2013
Attacks across Iraq on Monday killed 12 people, including three people who died in a suicide bombing at a police station near a school that also wounded 165 others, security officials and medics said. The bomber rammed his explosives-packed vehicle into a police station in the town of Dibis northwest of the northern oil city of Kirkuk, district official Abdullah al-Salehi told AFP. Sadiq ... read more


IRAQ WARS
Aspirin may lower melanoma risk

NIST quantum refrigerator offers extreme cooling and convenience

Researchers Solve Riddle of What Has Been Holding Two Unlikely Materials Together

Star-shaped waves spotted in shaken fluid

IRAQ WARS
Boeing Ships 5th WGS Satellite to Cape Canaveral for 2013 Launch

INTEROP-7000 uses ISSI to link IP-based voice comms with legacy radio

Space race under way to create quantum satellite

Boeing Receives USAF Contract for Integrated C4ISR Targeting Solution

IRAQ WARS
Grasshopper Successfully Completes 80M Hover Slam

Musk: 'I'd like to die on Mars'

Ariane 5 vehicle for next ATV resupply mission in Kourou

Vega launcher integration continues for its April mission

IRAQ WARS
China city searching for 'modern Marco Polo'

Milestone for European navigation system

China targeting navigation system's global coverage by 2020

Russian GLONASS space satellite group again at full strength

IRAQ WARS
Boeing, KLM Demonstrate New Technologies to Optimize Flight

Singapore in 'final stages' of evaluating F-35

Embraer urges quick resolution of US contract challenge

EU safety body certifies Airbus A400M army transporter

IRAQ WARS
Quantum computing moves forward

Creating indestructible self-healing circuits

Improving Electronics by Solving Nearly Century-old Problem

UCSB physicists make discovery in the quantum realm

IRAQ WARS
Significant reduction in temperature and vegetation seasonality over northern latitudes

GOCE: the first seismometer in orbit

Japan's huge quake heard from space: study

Space station to watch for Earth disasters

IRAQ WARS
Little faith in China leaders' pollution promises

Dead pigs contaminating Chinese river?

Toxic gas leak in South Korea, 11 hospitalised

Japan warns about smog drifting from China




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement