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2 Mosul churches bombed, three people injured

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  • 2 Mosul churches bombed, three people injured

    2 Mosul churches bombed, three people injured

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 7, 2004 Tuesday 12:52 PM Eastern Time

    MOSUL, Iraq -- Militants bombed two churches in Mosul on Tuesday,
    injuring three people in a coordinated attack apparently aimed at
    stirring trouble between religious groups in this ethnically diverse
    northern city.

    Police officials and church leaders said gunmen stormed into the
    churches and ordered people out of the buildings before detonating
    explosives in both.

    Deputy provincial governor Khasro Gouran said three people were
    wounded in the first church attack, which occurred at 2:30 p.m.
    (1130GMT) in eastern Mosul's Wihda neighborhood. Police officials had
    no details on casualties. The religious denomination of the church
    was not immediately clear, but it was believed to be Armenian.

    An hour later, gunmen stormed the Chaldean Christian church in western
    Mosul's Shefa neighborhood, forcing a handful of people out before
    rigging it with explosives and detonating them, according to Father
    Ragheed Aziz, of the church. No casualties were reported.

    Area residents said several carloads of gunmen surrounded the Chaldean
    church before 20 militants stormed the church compound.

    U.S. military spokeswoman Capt. Angela Bowman confirmed that one
    church had been attacked and set on fire. American soldiers were
    dispatched to the investigate the bombings.

    Islamic militants have regularly targeted different sectors of Iraq's
    multiethnic population, including the minority Christians, in a bid
    to disrupt the U.S.-led reconstruction of the war-scarred country.

    Insurgents also launched two other attacks in the city, shooting dead
    policeman Jassim Mohammed and firing a rocket-propelled grenade at
    the home of police Lt. Col. Nashwan Mohammed, according to police
    Capt. Ahmed Khalil.

    In August, four churches in Baghdad and one in Mosul were blown up in
    a coordinated series of car bombings, killing at least seven people
    and wounding dozens more in the first significant strike against
    Iraq's minority Christians since the U.S. invasion began last year.

    One person was killed and 11 injured in the August bombing of the
    church in Mosul, where a minority Christian community has for long
    lived in harmony with the city's Sunni Arab majority, and many say
    they still do. Any hostility toward Christians was mostly kept in
    check under the toppled dictator, Saddam Hussein, who didn't allow
    militant Islamists to gain clout.

    But Iraq's community of 750,000 Christians has grown increasingly
    anxious at the rise of Islamic fundamentalism since Saddam's ouster
    and hundreds have fled to neighboring Jordan and Syria.

    Some of Iraq's most feared Islamic militant terror networks, such
    as the Ansar al-Sunnah Army and al-Qaida in Iraq, have claimed
    responsibility for attacks in Mosul, the scene of a recent wave of
    violence targeting U.S. and Iraqi forces and Kurds. Senior Muslim
    leaders have condemned the violence, trying to quell Christian fears
    they were being routed from the country.
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