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Gunmen Attack Armenian, Chaldean Churches in Iraq

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  • Gunmen Attack Armenian, Chaldean Churches in Iraq

    Christian Post, CA
    Dec 7 2004

    Gunmen Attack Armenian, Chaldean Churches in Iraq

    Gunmen attacked two churches in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul
    Tuesday in the latest violence against Iraq's minority Christian
    community


    Pic: Workers remove a damaged gate at an Armenian church after gunmen
    attacked two churches in the latest violence directed against one of
    Iraq 's several religious and ethnic groups, witnesses said in the
    tense northern Iraqi city of Mosul December 7, 2004. (Photo: REUTERS
    / Namir Noor-Eldeen)

    Gunmen attacked two churches in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul
    Tuesday in the latest violence against Iraq's minority Christian
    community, witnesses said. Members of the churches, one Armenian, the
    other Chaldean, said gunmen burst in, forced people to leave and set
    off explosions inside the buildings, damaging them but hurting no
    one.

    "Gunmen entered the church at about 4:30 pm (1330 GMT)," said Father
    Raghid Aziz Kara at the Chaldean church. "They gathered those present
    in one room and planted explosive charges in different parts of the
    building,"

    Aziz told AFP, "We were then taken outside and the armed men set off
    the devices. We heard three blasts."

    At that same moment, gunmen attacked the Armenian Church, forcing out
    a security guard and two other people inside the building. The guard
    told AFP that he had heard two explosions.

    The attacks are the latest in a string of increasing violence
    directed at Iraq's Christian minority that has led to the destruction
    of places of worship and the building exodus of its 800,000 or so
    members.

    In a recent report by the Religion News Service, the agency reported
    that an estimated one of every 10 Iraqi Christians has fled the
    country, most of them to neighboring Syria.

    "After decades of living in relative harmony with the country's
    Muslim majority, Iraq's Christian minority says it is under threat as
    never before," RNS reported.

    Sister Beninia Hermes Shoukwana, a Christian nun and headmistress of
    a public school in Baghdad, told RNS that she was unable to hide her
    distress over the fate of her country and fellow Christians, most of
    them Chaldeans.

    "For years Christians and Muslims lived like brothers and sisters,"
    Shoukwana told RNS.

    "Today the extremists are trying to separate us."

    Last month, masked men detonated a bomb near an Orthodox Church in
    southern Baghdad, killing three people and wounding 34. In October,
    five Baghdad churches were attacked, causing damage but no
    casualties. In August, similar attacks killed at least 10 and wounded
    nearly 50 Iraqi Christians.

    The attacks follow an outbreak of insurgent violence across Iraq as
    the country nears its first democratic elections, slated for January.

    http://www.christianpost.com/article/africa/291/section/gunmen.attack.armenian.chaldean.churches.in.iraq/1.htm
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