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Britain's House Of Lords Discusses Assyrian Case

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  • Britain's House Of Lords Discusses Assyrian Case

    BRITAIN'S HOUSE OF LORDS DISCUSSES ASSYRIAN CASE

    Assyrian International News Agency
    Nov 21 2006

    (AINA) -- The following was raised by the Earl of Sandwich during a
    debate that convened at the House of Lords yesterday, 20th November
    2006:

    The Earl of Sandwich: My Lords, the words unusually missing from
    this gracious Speech are "poverty reduction" and "international
    development". However, I realise that much humanitarian work is hidden
    behind foreign policy and anti-terrorism, especially in conflict
    countries. What has happened to poverty reduction in Iraq?

    Is DfID still using that terminology, or is it impossible under
    these dangerous conditions to target the poorest and the victims
    of injustice?

    One group that I commend tonight, both in Iraq and the Middle East
    as a whole, is the Christian community, which is declining in number
    across the whole region. I hesitate to single out Christians, who
    often enjoy social and economic advantages which may be resented,
    not least because of their connections abroad. Nevertheless, for
    whatever reason, the churches in Iraq have unfairly become the
    focus of much discrimination, and even hatred, since 2003, and many
    Christian families are now reduced to acute material and spiritual
    poverty. The plight of the Assyrian Christians and other minorities
    has already been discussed. My noble and right reverend friend Lord
    Carey has also represented them, and the noble Lord, Lord Hylton,
    made a strong case for them in July last year.

    The Assyrians, or Nestorians, are the descendants of the people of
    Babylon and Nineveh. They were one of the earliest Christian sects.

    By the 9th century they had become a worldwide church extending as
    far as China and south India. For 12 centuries they lived mainly in
    harmony with Muslim Arabs in what we now call Kurdistan, but when
    missionaries arrived in northern Iraq, the Assyrians began to be
    persecuted. Hundreds of thousands were victims during the terrible
    Armenian massacre. Britain defended them against the Turks after
    1917, when Assyrian soldiers became trusted allies up to and after
    Iraq's independence in 1932. But at that time, thousands more, seen
    as collaborating with us, were killed by the Iraqi army.

    Historically, therefore, we are in their debt.

    It is hard to estimate the total number of Assyrians now, since so many
    have fled from Iraq to Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, the US, Australia and
    this country. Incidentally, the Home Office tried to send some of them
    back to Iraq on the absurd grounds that they were quite safe in the
    north. There are at least 600,000 to 700,000 left, and they and other
    related minorities such as the Chaldeans, the Syrian Orthodox Church,
    Catholics, Copts, Armenians and others, deserve much more attention
    and, above all, better protection from the Iraqi Government. That,
    of course, also means our Government. Thousands were oppressed and
    displaced along with the Kurds under Saddam Hussein's Arabisation
    policy, and the Commission for Resolution of Real Property Disputes
    is genuinely trying to help them to recover their homes and property,
    taken up to April 2003.

    Under Iraq's new human rights legislation, Christians in theory
    qualify for protection, but they are obviously not getting it from
    the police, the army or the occupying forces. They have no militia to
    protect them, like the larger Shia and Sunni factions. Many Christian
    communities have been directly targeted. In the past three years, 30
    churches and schools have been bombed in Baghdad and northern Iraq,
    and small businesses are constantly attacked.

    Some of those attacks have been in so-called retaliation for the
    Danish cartoons or the Pope's ill-judged lecture on Islam, for selling
    liquor, as they have done for centuries, or, in the case of women,
    for not wearing the veil. But in communities already fragmented by
    near civil war, the problem runs much deeper than that.

    Christian families live in daily fear of death threats. Last month
    an abducted priest from the Syriac Orthodox Church, Father Boulos
    Iskander, was found in Mosul, beheaded and dismembered soon after his
    family had already paid a ransom of $40,000. His kidnappers used the
    excuse of the Pope's remarks the previous month. Several young women
    have been killed after threats about the veil. A 14 year-old Christian
    Assyrian boy called Ayad Tariq in Baquba was also beheaded last month,
    according to the Assyrian news agency.

    Not surprisingly, many Christians have left Iraq, among the hundreds
    of thousands of refugees. Asylum seekers arriving in OECD countries
    doubled during the first six months of this year, and more than 8,000
    Iraqis applied to EU countries during that period­a higher figure than
    from any other region. The UN estimates that a further 425,000 Iraqis
    are displaced inside the country. Among them are urban professionals,
    doctors, teachers and technicians, many of them Christians. As one
    noble Lord has said, those who are most useful to Iraq in its present
    situation have been directly targeted by extremists.

    One Christian refugee who personifies the brave and almost hopeless
    struggle of minorities isDr Donny George, the former director of the
    National Museum in Baghdad, who helped to recover the treasures that
    were looted after the US invasion. Having come under increasing
    pressure from Shiites and Islamists, he resigned in August as
    president of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage. He even had
    to close the museum and seal it in concrete to save it. Like other
    archaeologists, Dr George has left the country and has moved with
    his family to Damascus.

    Money to pay the salaries of the special police force that valiantly
    defends Iraq's famous archaeological sites is running out. Again,
    we see a vicious minority of extremists determined to destroy their
    own culture, coupled with the apparent inability of the coalition
    and the Government to help. What can our Government do now to break
    this deadlock?

    Are the minorities receiving their fair share of the billions of
    dollars pledged in Madrid? My noble friend Lord St John raised this
    question. During last year's debate, the noble Baroness, Lady Royall,
    told my noble friend Lady Northover:

    "The Iraqi transitional Government ... have massive international
    support: $32 billion was pledged in Madrid ... it is of course
    up to the Iraqi Government to co-ordinate with the Kurdish
    regional government to afford an equitable redistribution of
    resources".­[Official Report, 6/7/05; col. 716.]

    Two noble Lords who visited Iraq have told us that this is not
    happening. Dr Kim Howells said:

    "The Iraqi Constitution contains provisions which guarantee democratic
    principles, rights and freedoms of all individuals, including the
    freedom of worship. We continue to encourage the Iraqi government
    to ensure these are protected".­[Official Report, Commons, 26/10/06;
    col. 2072W.]

    What does this "protection" mean in practice? What has happened to the
    resettlement programme in the Nineveh plain? Do the Kurdish Regional
    Government respect the constitution when they register householders to
    prevent terrorist infiltration or are they favouring the Kurds in this
    process? This issue came up in the Australian Federal Parliament on 29
    May, when Chris Bowen MP asked his Government to support a protected
    administrative region for the Assyrians. I do not go as far as my
    noble friend in suggesting that the Assyrians should have regional
    autonomy, as their own democratic movement proposes. I think that that
    is difficult to contemplate at a time when, as we have heard, Kurdish
    independence may again be on the cards as a result of a failed Iraqi
    state. There is a lot of historic suspicion on the Assyrian websites,
    but there is a lot of sense in supporting a protected homeland or
    some kind of administrative region for the Assyrians.

    The persecution of Christians by Muslims is neither new nor unique.

    It is mainly a story of exile that is being told in Iran, Pakistan,
    Egypt, Palestine and all over the Middle East. I accept that it is
    in part an unforeseen consequence of our own mistaken policies but
    that does not excuse us, and so long as we have influence in Iraq we
    have the opportunity of ending it.

    I will end by urging the Government to return to their position
    in 2002­it was advocated again tonight by several noble Lords­when
    a large number of states, including Iran, as the noble Lord, Lord
    Lamont, pointed out, united in a coalition against terrorism. I will
    briefly quote from the late Robin Cook's resignation speech in March
    2003. He said:

    "Only a year ago, we and the United States were part of a coalition
    against terrorism that was wider and more diverse than I would ever
    have imagined possible. History will be astonished at the diplomatic
    miscalculations that led so quickly to the disintegration of that
    powerful coalition. The US can afford to go it alone, but Britain is
    not a superpower. Our interests are best protected not by unilateral
    action but by multilateral agreement and a world order governed by
    rules".­[Official Report, Commons, 17/3/03; col. 726.]

    The following was the response on behalf of Her Majesty's government
    by The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Foreign and Commonwealth
    Office (Lord Triesman):

    On the point of the noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, about the Assyrian
    and other Christian minorities, we are working hard for the interests
    of the Christian minorities in Iraq. We support all minority groups
    in Iraq and, where we can, we play a role in facilitating their
    participation in society and in the Government. I can confirm that
    we are also supporting at a very considerable level, through DfID,
    the spending on the reconstruction of the country. We have pledged
    a total of £544 million on that goal.

    --Boundary_(ID_PpeOgSJiiQdPLlv7LIWTLg)--
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