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Iraq: Christian Businessman Killed In Mosul

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  • Iraq: Christian Businessman Killed In Mosul

    IRAQ: CHRISTIAN BUSINESSMAN KILLED IN MOSUL
    By Kim Gamel

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch
    The Associated Press
    10/14/2008
    United States

    BAGHDAD -- The music store owner had too many mouths to feed to
    consider joining other Iraqi Christians fleeing from violence in
    Mosul. The decision cost him his life as he became at least the 10th
    Christian slaughtered by suspected Sunni extremists in the northern
    city so far this month.

    Gunmen stormed into Farques Batool's store late Sunday in an eastern
    part of the city, killing him and wounding his teenage nephew,
    according to police and a neighbor.

    Batool, an Armenian Christian, was supporting his mother, his wife,
    a daughter, as well as the family of his dead brother, according to
    his neighbor.

    "He was a very kind man who refused to leave Mosul and insisted on
    staying to take care of his family," Raid Bahnam said. The family fled
    the city after his death, leaving his wounded nephew in the hospital.

    They joined thousands of other Christians who have abandoned their
    homes in Mosul to seek refuge in churches and with relatives in
    neighboring villages or in relatively safe Kurdish-controlled areas
    nearby.

    Cars and trucks loaded with suitcases, mattresses and passengers
    cradling baskets stuffed with clothing lined up Monday at a checkpoint
    about 20 miles east of the city on their way to safety.

    Nobody has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but local leaders
    have blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, which maintains influence in the region
    despite an ongoing U.S.-Iraqi military operation launched in May.

    Islamic extremists have frequently targeted Christians and other
    religious minorities since the 2003 U.S. invasion, forcing tens of
    thousands to flee Iraq -- although attacks slowed with a nationwide
    decline in violence.

    The reason for the latest surge in attacks was unclear. But it
    coincides with strong lobbying by Christian leaders for Iraq's
    parliament to restore a quota system to give religious minorities
    seats on provincial councils that will be chosen by voters before
    the end of January.

    U.N. special representative Staffan de Mistura strongly condemned
    "the spike in violence that has targeted the Christian communities
    in recent days" and warned the attacks were seeking to "fuel tensions
    and exacerbate instability at a critical time."

    Chaldean Archbishop Louis Sako of the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk
    denounced "a campaign of liquidation and violence, with political
    objectives."
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