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Iraqi Christians Receive Seasonal Wishes From UN Envoy

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  • Iraqi Christians Receive Seasonal Wishes From UN Envoy

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    Dec 26 2009


    Iraqi Christians Receive Seasonal Wishes From UN Envoy

    By Lisa Karpova And Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey
    www.pravda.ru

    The top United Nations envoy to Iraq today issued seasonal wishes to
    the country's Christians and to all Iraqis amid fears of a surge in
    violence targeting the country's Christian population. In a statement
    coinciding with Christmas Eve, the Secretary-General's Special
    Representative for Iraq Ad Melkert wished all Iraqis, and in
    particular Iraqi Christians, a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New
    Year.

    Iraq had a secular government under Sadaam Hussein. Christians and
    Muslims lived side by side in peace and harmony. Christians even had
    high positions in the Iraqi government, as well as small ones. They
    didn't have to fear for their lives or being the target of violence.
    Iraq's Christians have historically played an important role in
    maintaining the country's unique and rich societal fabric, and they
    continue to contribute to preserving national unity in the face of
    much adversity.

    There are no specific statistics about the total population of
    Christians in Iraq now because of current instability. The Christian
    population before the U.S. invasion of the country, in 2003, was
    estimated to have been about one million, but since then because of
    bombing of their churches, killing, kidnapping and other terrorist
    attacks against members of the community by Islamic fanatics, more
    than half of the community has been forced to abandon their homeland
    and seek refuge in Syria, Jordan, Iran, Lebanon and other moderate
    countries.

    This is the kind of government the US and the Israelis seem to have a
    major problem with. You have Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Syria,
    Palestine...all of these countries have shown tolerance and friendship
    to their Christian minorities and have appreciated their contributions
    to their respective societies. However, you have places like Saudi
    Arabia, Azerbaijan and Turkey where Christians have been subjected to
    all kinds of abuses and genocide and guess what? The US and Israel are
    their best friends.

    The modern militant form of Islam in the Middle East, even if it were
    not a bastard child of the Western neocolonial strategists, certainly
    has brought devastation to the region. Western interests have seen
    Nasser's pan-Arabism (Ben-Bela, Burgiba, Saddam Hussein, King Hassan)
    as a major obstacle to their economic and geopolitical interests. They
    believe that sacrificing the Christians in Iraq has been a price well
    worth paying even though it was not theirs to pay.

    Christian churches in Baghdad, Kirkuk, and Mosul have been bombed
    throughout the war. Now, priests and others in Nineveh Plain say they
    pay large sums of money to Al Qaeda-linked militants in Mosul, the
    provincial capital, in exchange for protection for themselves and
    their churches. Christian churches are surrounded by barbed wire and
    fences where none were needed before.

    The extortion has not kept Christians safe. Nearly every one has had a
    heart-wrenching story to tell about kidnapping, extortion, and
    displacement at the hands of Islamic extremists intent on driving
    Christians from the region.

    "I had a choice: Convert to Islam, pay the tax, or give away one of my
    daughters," says a man originally from Baghdad, who was kidnapped two
    years ago and released only after his family paid a hefty ransom. Now,
    he's trying to leave Iraq for good.

    The US-led invasion of March 2003 sent thousands of Armenian
    Christians fleeing to Armenia, Syria and Lebanon. Others have
    resettled in the United States, Sweden and Holland. Much different
    than in Saddam's Iraq, when special classes were allowed in Armenian
    language and religious studies.

    At least 45 Armenians have been killed in the post-Saddam years of
    rampant insurgency, sectarian warfare and often unbridled crime, while
    another 32 people have been kidnapped for ransom, two of whom are
    still missing. On December 7, 2004, assailants firebombed a new church
    in the northern city of Mosul, an Al-Qaeda bastion, just days before
    it was to be inaugurated.

    Like all Iraqis, Armenian Christians have also been caught up in car
    bombings, killed during robberies or in cases of mistaken shootings by
    the US military and private security firm Blackwater. Speaking of
    Iraq's hospitality and kindness after the Armenian Genocide, an
    Armenian Christian family declared, "We are indebted to the Arabs.
    They did everything to welcome us. They allowed us to live and to rise
    in society, after Armenian survivors, many of them orphans, had
    arrived bare-footed from death marches across the desert."

    The Iraqi army said its forces were put on alert in areas with
    significant Christian populations because of intelligence reports that
    they could be once again be subjected to attack as they have been
    continually since the American invasion set loose the elements of
    intolerance, fanaticism, criminality and fascism. For that, Iraqi
    Christians must be truly grateful to the Americans.

    In the last month, there has been an increase in deadly attacks
    against Christians in Mosul, Iraq's second largest city. In October
    last year, more than 12,000 Christians fled Mosul following an upsurge
    in attacks, threats and intimidation. Some later returned.

    http://www.aina.org/news/2009122519919. htm

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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